Losses in Filipino workers’ wages and productivity because of COVID-19 have been estimated to reach as much as P2.3 trillion during their lifetime, according to a study by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS).

According to the PIDS, this economic cost mostly came from the pandemic’s indirect impact, such as people suffering from other diseases who were not able to be treated as hospitals prioritized COVID-19 infections and school closures which impacted children’s learning.

To address the problem, PIDS suggested that government must find innovative ways for non-COVID-19 patients to still be able to access healthcare services during the pandemic, such as by investing in electronic health information systems to digitize monitoring and surveillance, as well as incentivizing telemedicine use.

Senator Christopher Lawrence “Bong” Go understands how digitalization of government services has become essential and has called for the passage of the E-Governance Bill, which seeks to establish an integrated, interconnected, and interoperable information and resource sharing communications network in government for speedy delivery of public services.

“I have a pending bill in the Senate, the proposed E-Governance Act that I filed on my first year as a Senator. It can serve partly as a blueprint and model on how we transform many processes into digitalized form,” said Senator Go.

Apart from the government network, the bill likewise provides for the establishment of an internal records management information system and a centralized information database. Significantly, it provides for the establishment and sustenance of digital portals through which the public may request and receive public services. It also pushes for the digitization of paper-based and other traditional modes of workflows for a more efficient and transparent public service.

The measure aims to serve as a guide for the country’s eventual transition to the digital age, enabling the government to run more efficiently. This is in line with the government’s push to be closer to its constituents, offering improved access to the government through the use of modern technology.

One form of this proposed nationwide digitalization specifically geared toward addressing public health issues is the use and implementation of eHealth services, which is sought to be institutionalized through the eHealth bill filed by Go. The measure provides for the use of information and communication technologies for health or eHealth as one of the enabling strategic instruments not only to address current disparities in service care delivery and timely access to information for better decision-making and intervention, but also to support and facilitate the achievement of the Universal Health Care goals of better outcomes, sustained health financing, and responsive health system.

Presidential aspirant Go, who vowed to continue the programs of the Duterte Administration, also said the current administration has already institutionalized reforms to streamline government processes such as the signing of RA 11032 or the Ease of Doing Business Act, the creation of an Anti-Red Tape Authority or ARTA, facilitating the transition to E-Governance, and the implementation of the Philippine ID System, among others.

Meanwhile, to directly support the healthcare needs of Filipinos, particularly the poor, Senator Go, who authored and sponsored the passage of Republic Act No. 11463, or the Malasakit Center Act, said he plans to establish more Malasakit Centers to help with the hospitalization costs of indigent Filipinos.

The Malasakit Center Act provides poor and indigent Filipinos who had been hospitalized convenient access to the government’s various medical assistance programs. There are currently 149 fully operational Malasakit Centers nationwide. Senator Go said he wants to double that number in his first 100 days if elected President.

“My goal is that every public hospital in the country will have a Malasakit Center. We will bring down to the lowest amount possible, if not zero balance, the hospital bill of our poor people,” said Go.

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