What Is Project Entreprenurse
What Is Project Entreprenurse
An initiative of DOLE, in collaboration with BON-PRC, DOH, PNA, UPCN, OHNAP and othergovernment and nongovernment entities to promote nurse entrepreneurship by introducing ahome health care industry in the Philippines: 1. 2. 3. to reduce the cost of health care for the countrys indigent population by bringing primary health care services to poor rural communities, to maximize employment opportunities for the countrys unemployed nurses and to utilize the countrys unemployed human resources for health for the delivery of public health services and the achievement of the countrys Millennium Development Goals on maternal and child health, consistent with the Formula One for Health framework of the Department of Health. First Project The Davao Region will be the pilot area for the program wherein there will be one nurses cooperative for each of the five provinces and one for Davao City. It is chosen as the pilot area because the idea for the program was conceptualized by Dole regional Director Jalilo dela Torre. Nearly 500 nurses in Region 11 have now banded together to form nurses cooperatives and are busy complying with the requirements for registration with the Cooperative Development Authority as a cooperative. After registration, they will be assisted by MASICAP to put together business plans that they can use to ask for grants from government and non-governmentsources. Among the potential sources of revenues for the cooperatives are the local governmentunits, Philhealths capitation fund, foreign donors and migrant Filipino organizations abroad. The DOH will be a critical partner as source of data on the status of health services delivery in poor rural communities. Even before CDA registration, the Davao del Norte group, buoyed by the expression of total support by Governor Rodolfo del Rosario, have already started negotiating with local chief executives, with successful results. The programs strategy is to encourage nurses to form cooperatives with a minimum number of nurse members of 500 and manage nurses clinic, under the supervision of trained and experienced nurses, which will deploy newly licensed nurses to poor rural communities with little or no access to basic health care.
Project Description: An initiative of DOLE, in collaboration with BON-PRC, DOH, PNA, UPCN, OHNAP and other government and non-government entities to promote nurse entrepreneurship by introducing a home health care industry in the Philippines: 1) to reduce the cost of health care for the countrys indigent population by bringing primary health
care services to poor rural communities, 2) to maximize employment opportunities for the countrys unemployed nurses and
3) to utilize the countrys unemployed human resources for health for the delivery of public health services and the achievement of the countrys Millennium Development Goals on maternal and child health, consistent with the Fourmula One for Health framework of the Department of Health.
Rationale
This initiative aims to achieve public health objectives and at the same time address the unemployment problem of licensed nurses in the country. The strategy is to encourage nurses to form cooperatives and manage nurses clinics, under the supervision of trained and experienced nurses, which will deploy newly licensed nurses to poor rural communities with little or no access to basic health care and with substantial populations of sick, elderly and disabled patients. There services will be compensated by the LGU, Philhealth, HMOs, by the patients themselves on a per visit basis, or from grants from local and foreign donors. Congressmens and Senators Priority Development Funds shall also be tapped. Quality health care is an expensive option for most Filipinos, many of whom do not have health insurance. The popular saying, Bawal Magkasakit is not only an attempt at dark humor but reflects a reality that the overwhelming majority of Filipinos simply cannot afford quality health care. The data from the HMOs is that only less than 15% of the population have health insurance. The rest pay for health care services either out of pocket or through the Philhealth. In 2002, the World Health Organization estimated that of total health expenditures in the Philippines, 47.5% is out of pocket. Beyond the issue of the high cost of quality health care, access to primary health care is also a problem amongst poor rural communities. In one report of one of our nurses under Project NARS, a pregnant woman died under his watch simply because the island town lacked oxygen supplies. The Philippines has one of the worst health manpower to population ratio in Asia. In 1999, our ratio of one doctor per 9,689 population is only slightly better than Cambodias 9,997, but lower than Indonesias 6,195, Thailands 3,670, Myanmars 3,291, Vietnams 2,122, Malaysias 1,465 and Singapores 731. In Region 11, the ratio of public health manpower to population is even more worrying: Compostela Valley has only 1 government doctor for every 49,666 population and one government nurse for every 40,353; Davao del Norte has one doctor for every 53,924 and one nurse for every 27,832; Davao del Sur has one doctor for every 49,189 and one nurse for every 32,793; Davao City, the regional center, has one doctor for every 73,484 and one nurse for every 39,891. Therefore, the deployment of nurses to poor rural communities in these provinces is an urgent need and it is in the interest of these LGUs to support the initiative.
The home health-care business, now a $55 B industry in the United States and is making inroads in India, is one of the more effective strategies for reducing hospitalization costs for people who cant afford it. Patients who are medically fit to go home continue to be cared for in a home setting by healthcare professionalsnurses, physical therapists, nursing aides, LPNs, medical technologistscan expect to see their medical services bill considerably reduced. These healthcare professionals, principally nurses, aside from performing in-home services to qualified patients, may at the same perform public health functions while in the community to serve indigent patients and educate the community on the prevention of diseases. On the other hand, the oversupply of registered nurses in the country, now estimated at 150,000, resulting from the boom in the number of nursing schools and the spike in nursing enrolment from the 1980s to 2008 (there has been a 17% drop in enrolment for 2009) has brought home the issue of how to provide employment opportunities for our unemployed nurses. The DOLEs Project NARS has provided temporary employment for 11,000 nurses all over the country in 1,000 poverty-stricken municipalities, but the sustainability of the project beyond 2009 still needs to be worked on. Many local chief executives are now petitioning for the extension of the 6-month training program because they have seen the public health value of Project NARS. Our nurses in their 3-month stint in rural health units were involved in, among others, blood donation drive, birth delivery, dispensing of medicines, immunization, pre-natal check-ups, nutrition evaluation, mass treatment of schistosomiasis, cataract operation, pre-marriage counseling, OPD referrals, medical and dental services caravan, TB program enrollment, minor surgery, family planning seminar, tubal ligation/vasectomy, dental health program, distribution of AH1N1 information materials and dengue surveillance. Needless to say, our Project NARS nurses made quite an impact on the rural health situation in the short time that they were assigned in the rural areas, and we must build on the goodwill among our local government units which the project has generated by introducing a similar beneficial initiative. Unemployed nurses shall be organized into cooperatives, whose main purpose is to deliver home health care services to its own members and members of HMOs, Philhealth members and self-paying members. There shall be at least 500 members per cooperative for a city and at least 1,000 members for a province. Metro Manila cities shall be considered a province for the purpose of this initiative. The objectives of such cooperatives will not only be the personal health and well-being of its customers, but to collaborate with rural health units in the achievement of Millennium Development Goals in maternal and child health and other public health objectives.