Thursday, April 09, 2026

WHY THE LONG WAIT IN PUBLIC HOSPITALS?

WHY THE LONG WAIT IN PUBLIC HOSPITALS?

I watched a video about patients waiting to be admitted to a public hospital. It was about 3:00 a.m., and outside the hospital people lay on the sidewalks, already asleep while they waited for admission. How could something like that happen in our country?

I know the feeling— months ago, I found myself in the emergency room of a private hospital, waiting hours before a bed became available. If that’s the experience in a private hospital, how much worse must it be in a public one?

The Root of the Problem

We often hear: “long waiting times in public hospitals—because there aren’t enough beds.” And yes, beds are part of the issue. But I’m convinced the problem runs deeper: the lack of rooms. You can buy beds. But you cannot magically create hospital wings without spaces, infrastructure or rooms. So when hospitals say they have long queues, it may not just be beds—they may simply have nowhere to put new patients.

In fact, the Department of Health (DOH) has acknowledged the bed shortage: the average in the Philippines is about 0.5 beds per 1,000 people—far below the targeted 1.5 per 1,000. A think-tank study found 27 provinces with less than 0.5 beds per 1,000 people.

So yes, we need more beds—but more fundamentally, we need more rooms, wings, facilities to place those beds. That requires budget allocation, construction, design, planning.

Why Hasn’t the Government Responded More Vigorously?

Here’s where I ask the tough questions.

  1. Budget trade-offs: Why hasn’t more budget gone into hospital room construction? There’s a recent news item: Risa Hontiveros urged that funds earmarked for flood-control projects be redirected to hospital beds and infrastructure, because public hospitals reportedly only have 28,153 beds though the requirement is 118,528. If this is true—why is the choice between flood control and health infrastructure even one of debate? We should be doing both—but perhaps the balance has skewed.

  2. Structural inertia: Building classrooms seems almost simpler than building hospital rooms. Prefabricated materials, modular hospitals—they’re feasible. Yet why are so many hospitals still operating beyond capacity? The walk-in culture, lack of triage, manual systems also play a role.

  3. Standards and accountability: I understand policies exist—there are supposed standards for beds per population and rooms. But what’s the timeline? If the DOH is targeting reducing ER wait times (12–24 hours) to under 4 hours, this implies large structural reform ahead. Shouldn’t the government set a concrete deadline—“By year X we will have built Y rooms/hospital wings”? Without deadlines, we must ask: where is the political will?

  4. Resource allocation vs need: In a country prone to disasters, flooding, and climate shocks, we recognise the importance of flood-control projects. But is there proportionality in how we allocate funds between environment/infrastructure and health infrastructure? Because what’s the use of flood control if health systems collapse under strain?

What Can We Suggest?

Here are a few ideas:

  • Modular hospital wings: Prefabricated or modular hospital units (rooms + beds) can be erected relatively quickly. This could be a short-term bridge while permanent structures are built.

  • Decentralize more care: If tertiary public hospitals are overwhelmed, strengthen barangay health units, satellite clinics, even tele-medicine for non-critical cases—so fewer people arrive at the ER needing admission.

  • Referral systems and triage: Improve how patients are managed—minor ailments should not clog emergency rooms. Encourage earlier care so that only those truly needing beds go to hospitals.

  • Clear budget timelines: The DOH, Congress, and local governments should commit to realistic but firm milestones for increasing hospital room and bed capacity—e.g., “We will build X new rooms by 2027.”

  • Transparency and tracking: Let us know how many rooms are added, where, which hospitals. Monitoring will build public pressure and accountability.

When I saw those people sleeping on the sidewalks at 3 a.m., I saw more than waiting—they were victims of a system stretched beyond its capacity. At some point, compassion and infrastructure must meet. Waiting hours (or days) for admission isn’t just an inconvenience—it’s a health risk, dignity lost, potential life cut short.

So yes—why the long wait? Because too many of our public hospitals are operating like bottlenecks in a pipeline that needs to be widened. Because beds alone are not enough when rooms are missing. Because the infrastructure investment hasn’t kept pace with our population, our disease burdens, our expectations.

And as citizens, we deserve better. We should ask not only for more beds—but for more rooms, more systems, and a more responsive healthcare infrastructure. We should expect a government that sees emergency rooms and public hospitals not as stop-gaps but as worthy pillars of a mature system.

Because health isn’t optional—it’s foundational. And when we build for health, we build for dignity, for justice, for a country where no one sleeps on a sidewalk waiting for care.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877292/04-10-2026


Wednesday, April 08, 2026

FIGHTING POVERTY WITH BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY

 FIGHTING POVERTY WITH BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY

Poverty. The word itself carries a heavy weight. And yet, in the world of policymaking it’s often treated as a single problem—when in fact, it isn’t. Too many government officials speak of “poverty alleviation” and “poverty reduction” as though they are interchangeable. They’re not. If we want to unlock real change, we need to treat them as two distinct challenges—with distinct solutions. And here’s where digital innovation, specifically Blockchain technology, is beginning to offer something radically different.

Alleviation vs. Reduction: Not the Same Thing
Poverty alleviation is about easing the burden of poverty—making life a little less hard today for people who are struggling. It means services, support systems, safety-nets. Poverty reduction, on the other hand, is about giving people the means to climb above the poverty line—sustainable income, opportunity, change in status. Two databases, I suggest, should be built: one to map who needs immediate alleviation, the other to identify who is capable of reduction—who can move up, if given the right tools.

Why separate? Because the metrics differ, the interventions differ, the outcomes differ. But both need the same starting point: baseline data—clean, reliable, targeted. And that’s where blockchain enters the conversation.

The Promise of Blockchain
Blockchain offers a secure, transparent ledger: a way of recording data that cannot be easily manipulated, duplicated or hidden. For governments or aid agencies trying to figure out who needs help, what type of help, how much, it is game-changing.

Here are some of the ways blockchain is already being used:

  • Economic identity for the unbanked. Over 2.5 billion people globally lack access to formal banking. Blockchain enables digital identities and wallets even for those outside the banking system.

  • Transparent aid distribution. When aid flows go through blockchain‐enabled systems, it becomes far harder for corruption, leakages or duplication to creep in. For example, the World Food Programme’s “Building Blocks” project has processed over US$550 million of cash-based transfers via blockchain, saved millions in bank fees, and prevented overlap of assistance programmes. 

  • Microfinance, peer-to-peer lending. By removing expensive intermediaries, blockchain platforms help small-entrepreneurs and farmers who were previously excluded.

  • Land and asset ownership. Blockchain can record property rights in a tamper-proof way—critical in places where informal tenure and displacement are the norm.

  • Fair-trade and supply-chain transparency. Farmers and artisans can use blockchain to prove where their product came from, get fair compensation, and access new markets. The enterprise BanQu is a teeming example in this space.

Real-World Success Stories
Consider BanQu: men and women in extreme poverty, unbanked, without credit history, now get an “economic passport” via blockchain. They prove they exist, they collect transparent payments, and they begin to enter formal supply chains.

Or take Building Blocks by WFP: in Jordan, Bangladesh and Ukraine this system allowed refugees and needy households to access cash-based assistance via blockchain wallets, coordinating support from multiple agencies and significantly reducing duplication and cost. 

These are not theoretical. They are working models.

Questions and Suggestions for the Philippines
If we are serious about building a Philippines that tackles both alleviation and reduction of poverty, here are some thoughts:

  • Do we have reliable baseline data today? If not, build the two distinct databases mentioned above—one for immediate support (alleviation), one for longer-term uplift (reduction).

  • Could blockchain be integrated into those databases so that duplications of aid are removed, transparency is increased, and trust is built between citizens and institutions?

  • How can we ensure the unbanked in remote provinces or informal settlements gain “economic identity” so they can participate in micro-finance, savings systems or wage incomes?

  • What legislation, regulatory frameworks and capacity-building must be put in place so that blockchain platforms are secure, inclusive (especially of women and marginalised groups), and cheap enough not to exclude the neediest?

  • Finally: how do we move from pilot schemes to national scale—so that blockchain becomes not just an experiment but part of the infrastructure of our social welfare system?

Caveats and Realism
Blockchain is not a magic wand. As one analysis pointed out: while the technology offers new opportunities, it is sometimes over‐hyped and unsuited if implemented without attention to local context, infrastructure, digital literacy and cost-effectiveness. 

It must complement—not replace—good policy, sound institutions, investment in education and healthcare. Poverty reduction is structural. Technology can be an enabler but not a saviour.


The fight against poverty demands both compassion and innovation. In the Philippines, we cannot remain content simply to maintain safety nets (alleviation). We must aim for uplift (reduction). Blockchain offers one potent tool for the task: securing data, cutting waste, giving identity, opening access.

But at the end of the day: the question will be not just whether we can deploy technology—but whether we deploy it wisely, inclusively, and as part of a broader strategy to build human dignity, opportunity and national renewal.

If we dare that ambition, then the cries from the margins will begin to be met not with pity—but with power.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-09-2026


Tuesday, April 07, 2026

A NATIONAL PRAYER FOR MERCY AND RENEWAL

A NATIONAL PRAYER FOR MERCY AND RENEWAL

I write to you now as a fellow citizen of this nation—haunted, hopeful, and heart-weary all at once. The prayer penned by Fr. Tito Caluag is not simply a ritual recitation, it is a mirror held up to our collective condition: we are, as he writes, “like a stray sheep that has fallen from the cliff, clinging desperately to a brittle branch, crying out for rescue.”

Is that too harsh? Perhaps. But is it untrue? I don’t believe so.

The Valley of Darkness

We live in a time of dual sorrow: the visible wounds of calamity, and the less visible but deeper wounds of corruption, silence, compromise. Fr. Caluag names both. He speaks of floods, earthquakes, fires and typhoons—of a people battered, vulnerable. He also points to budget insertions depleting funds for the poor, political dynasties acting as modern feudal lords, infrastructure that robs us of progress.

And the data backs him. According to a recent survey, 97 % of Filipinos believe corruption is “very widespread” or “somewhat widespread” in government. The Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index in 2023 gave the Philippines a score of 34 out of 100 — ranking us 115th out of 180 countries. If you feel we are drowning, the statistics agree.

Mercy & Renewal—More Than Words

Fr. Caluag beseeches mercy: “Have mercy on us, O God, according to Your steadfast love!” This line (citing Psalm 51:1) is a confession—not only of our faults, but of our longing to be different. But here is my observation: mercy without renewal becomes a thin band-aid over a festering wound. If we cry “Lord, have mercy,” but do not allow that to change our behavior, we remain stuck in the same valley.

He continues: “You have told us … to act justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with You” (Micah 6:8). So let me ask: how often have we walked humbly? How often have we loved mercy in our dealings—with neighbors, officials, contractors, ourselves?

The Cost of Silence and Compromise

Fr. Caluag’s list of sins is not melodramatic—it is everyday: bribing fixers, tolerating lies in the media, accepting donations from exploiters, covering injustice with silence. These are our sins; they are my sins; they are the sins of a society that often opts for convenience over courage.

What’s worse, the wounds we inflict upon ourselves are deep. Consider the Philippine Statistics Authority’s data: in 2024, there were 225 occurrences of small-scale natural hazard incidents, the most frequent being flash floods (23.6 %). These disasters compound when infrastructure is substandard or funds are misused. The prayer’s lament about substandard infrastructure is therefore not hyperbole but reality-checking.

Hope in Action

But—and this is the pivot—the column does not end in despair. Fr. Caluag says: “We have failed, but we will not lose hope.” I echo that. Because recognition is the first step toward renewal.

What does renewal look like? From my vantage point it means:

  • Transparency and accountability: Officials and citizens alike must be willing to be held to account. The CPI ranking shows how far we are—and that the global average is 43, while ours is 34.

  • Civic courage: We must stop being comfortable with silence and complacency. The prayer’s call to “breathe into us courage to rise above greed and power” is a challenge to each of us.

  • Prioritizing the weakest: The survival of the weakest, not just the strongest, must be the mark of our humanity. Our policies, our compassion, our reforms must bear that out.

  • Walking humbly, loving mercy: Beyond the big headlines are daily choices—will I bribe? Will I tolerate the lie? Will I cover injustice? Will I spend one moment caring for someone weaker than myself?

  • Faith that transforms: The prayer roots renewal not in mere strategy but in the Holy Spirit—“Come, Holy Spirit, renew … the face of our nation!” The spiritual dimension matters, because moral renewal precedes structural reform.

Questions I Must Ask—And You Must Ask

  • If nearly 97 % of our people believe corruption is rampant, what does that mean for our democracy and our civic trust?

  • If disasters hit us again and again, and our infrastructure and budgets often fail the test—can we afford to keep things as they are?

  • If the nation is rich in resources, yet many remain poor, what breaks the cycle: stronger institutions or deeper personal integrity—or both?

  • And finally: as the citizen reading this column, am I part of the solution—or part of the problem?

A Closing Word

Fr. Tito Caluag’s prayer is not merely spiritual—it is social, political, moral and national. It invites us to stand before the Shepherd of our country, confessing our brokenness, but also committing to renewal.
In the language of a newspaper column: our nation is crying out. The rescue branch is brittle, yes—but the Shepherd reaches. The question is: will we cling? And will we climb?

Let us hope, pray, act. Because mercy and renewal are not luxuries—they are necessities for our national life.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-08-2026


Monday, April 06, 2026

USING SOLAR-POWERED SATELLITE PHONES

USING SOLAR-POWERED SATELLITE PHONES

When all else fails—when the power grid collapses, cell towers go silent, and the internet goes dark—what remains? In times of disaster, the humble satellite phone becomes the last line of communication, the invisible thread connecting rescuers, survivors, and command centers. But what happens when even electricity is gone? That’s where the solar-powered satellite phone comes in—a simple but powerful solution to a very Filipino problem: unreliable power and unreliable signals.


Satellite phones, as we know, don’t depend on terrestrial cell towers. They link directly to satellites orbiting Earth, making them indispensable in disaster-prone countries like ours. Typhoons, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions can take down the best fiber optic lines and the strongest telecom towers—but not the sky. However, as practical as these phones are, they still need energy. During the onslaught of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), communication breakdowns delayed relief operations for days. That’s why solar kits for satellite phones are a must-have for every emergency response team, police outpost, and coastal barangay.


To be clear, there is no such thing as a satellite phone that runs purely on solar cells. Instead, solar charging kits—like those made by Sunslice, Goal Zero, and Iridium’s own off-grid bundles—allow these devices to be powered anywhere under the sun. The standard kit usually includes a 5- to 20-watt solar panel, a power bank, and adapters that can charge both the satellite phone and other small devices.


In the Philippines, some agencies are already making quiet moves toward this technology. The Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT), through its programs for Geographically Isolated and Disadvantaged Areas (GIDAs), is deploying solar-powered satellite kits for rural connectivity. The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) also rely on satellite phones for emergency coordination—particularly in regions where the first thing that disappears after a storm is the signal.


The Philippine Coast Guard and the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) use satellite systems for patrol and rescue operations. Even the Philippine National Police (PNP), under Memorandum Circular No. 2023-067, mandates satellite communication for field commanders during crises. While these policies don’t explicitly require solar kits, they should—especially since most police detachments in the far-flung areas struggle with electricity.


One local player, iOne Resources, Inc., has been offering “SatLink Enterprise”—a managed satellite network bundled with solar-powered kits designed for off-grid use. It’s a good model for public-private partnerships: the government provides funding, while the private sector provides technical capacity and maintenance.


But here’s where it gets tricky: corruption. Procurement of high-value technology is often tainted by overpricing and kickbacks. It’s not uncommon to hear stories of satellite phones bought at double their real price, or solar kits procured that never get delivered. This is why I suggest bringing blockchain technology into the picture—not as a buzzword, but as a solution.


A blockchain-based procurement ledger, such as those offered by local platforms like Aksyonchain, can record every step of the bidding, purchase, and payment process. The advantage? Transparency. Prices are visible to all stakeholders. Audit trails are immutable. No official can inflate the cost without everyone noticing. In short, blockchain can disinfect the system with sunlight—the best disinfectant of all.


Imagine this: every purchase of a solar-powered satellite kit is logged publicly on a blockchain. The public can see that the phone costs ₱150,000, the solar kit ₱20,000, and the delivery fee ₱5,000—no hidden “miscellaneous” charges. With such a system, we could finally say goodbye to the “commission culture” that plagues disaster preparedness.


Now, imagine if every barangay—from Batanes to Tawi-Tawi—had at least one solar-powered satellite phone. In an archipelago of more than 7,000 islands, such redundancy isn’t a luxury; it’s a necessity. It would empower local officials to call for help immediately, even when cut off from the mainland. It could even save lives.


The challenge, of course, is funding. Should the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) prioritize this? Should local government units (LGUs) allocate a slice of their calamity funds to procure these kits? I say yes—to all of the above. It’s not just an investment in hardware, but in resilience.


In the age of climate change, where super typhoons are the new normal, we can’t afford to lose communication for even an hour. We have the technology. We have local suppliers. What we lack is political will—and perhaps a little more honesty.


So yes, let’s buy solar-powered satellite phones. But let’s also procure them the right way—powered not just by sunlight, but by transparency. Because when the next big one hits, and all we have left is the sky, that small, solar-charged signal could make all the difference between chaos and coordination.


After all, in times of crisis, a single phone call can save a thousand lives.


Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-07-2026


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