Senator Sonny Angara has called on the government to take decisive action to bridge the disparity in cancer treatment for rich and poor patients given the skyrocketing cost of cancer care and medication.
Such decisive action, he said, should take the form of increased access to drugs for cancer treatment and expanded coverage for preventive and diagnostic services.
“It is high time the government comes up with an integrated and comprehensive approach to bridge the divide between rich and poor cancer patients,” Angara said.
“We need to develop a system in which all people with cancer have access to high-quality and affordable cancer treatments,” the veteran legislator added.
The seasoned lawmaker noted that many of the medical advances that allow cancer patients to live longer come at a high cost, and chemotherapy is one of the most expensive parts of treatment.
Other cancer care expenses include doctor and clinic visits, radiation treatments, imaging tests like X-rays and MRIs, hospital stays, surgery and home care, the youthful senator said.
“Treating cancer isn’t cheap. The average cost for a year’s worth of treatment could run into hundreds of thousands to millions of pesos,” Angara lamented.
Due to high cost, he said people with advanced cancer turn down recommended care while other cancer patients and their families use up all or most of their savings to pay for treatment.
It is for this reason why Angara has filed Senate Bill (SB) No. 1570, or the proposed National Integrated Cancer Control Act, which seeks to make cancer treatment and care more equitable and affordable for all Filipinos.
SB 1570 provides for a P30-billion cancer assistance fund to support the medical and treatment assistance program for cancer patients, especially those who belong to the most vulnerable sectors of society.
“Cancer is a complex and catastrophic disease which is an urgent public health concern. That’s why is important that we institutionalize a systematic, well-organized, well-coordinated, well-funded, patient- and family-centered integrated cancer control programs at all levels of the existing health care delivery system,” Angara said.
Cancer is a complex and catastrophic disease which is an urgent public health concern.
The bill seeks to expand the current benefits of the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. or PhilHealth to include screening, detection, diagnosis, treatment assistance, palliative and supportive care, survivorship follow-up care and rehabilitation. This should cover all types and stages of cancer of patients regardless of age.
The proposed measure targets to lower overall mortality and impact of all adult and childhood cancers, decrease incidence of preventable cancer in adults, and prevent cancer relapse and recurrence and secondary cancers among people living with cancers and survivors.
Once passed into law, the amount necessary to implement its provisions during the first year will be charged against the annual appropriations of the Department of Health, the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office, the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. and the Department of Social Welfare and Development.
The succeeding budget will come from the 10-percent of incremental revenues from the excise tax revenues on alcohol products collected by the government pursuant to Republic Act No. 10351, among other tax revenues.