HEADLINES

Infrastructure alone won’t heal: A doctor’s honest look at healthcare reforms

Real healthcare reform is about more than infrastructure — it’s about fundamentally improving the lives of those we serve.

Brian Michael Icasas Cabral

As a physician directly involved in healthcare delivery, I’ve closely watched recent reforms under the Marcos administration unfold — Super Health Centers (SHCs), BUCAS clinics and expanded zero-balance billing. While these initiatives seem promising on paper, their actual impact has been deeply mixed.

Super Health Centers are designed to dramatically improve local healthcare access, equipped with diagnostic services, maternity care and even minor surgical capabilities.

Super Health Centers are designed to dramatically improve local healthcare access, equipped with diagnostic services, maternity care and even minor surgical capabilities. Indeed, many rural areas now have impressive new facilities previously unimaginable. But new buildings alone cannot deliver healthcare. Time and again, I’ve witnessed well-intentioned facilities standing nearly empty, waiting desperately for doctors, nurses, and medical staff who simply aren’t there. Diagnostic equipment sits idle, and patients continue traveling long distances for essential treatments. Infrastructure without adequate staffing is ineffective at best, and wasteful at worst.

The BUCAS clinics, intended as urgent-care hubs to ease hospital burdens, have seen similarly uneven implementation. While the existing centers have provided genuine relief to patients with minor urgent issues, their numbers remain insufficient. The ambition to provide accessible urgent care nationwide is severely limited by the lack of expansion and chronic understaffing. Patients frequently must travel significant distances only to find that these clinics, though functional, are unable to handle even slightly complex medical cases. This forces patients back into already overcrowded hospitals, negating the intended impact of the BUCAS clinics.

urgent-care hubs to ease hospital burdens.

The zero-balance billing initiative has delivered significant improvements in reducing financial stress for patients in public hospitals. Personally, I’ve seen profound relief among families previously devastated by hospital bills. However, the policy’s effectiveness remains inconsistent. Patients frequently experience shortages in medication and essential supplies, undermining the core intent of the policy. Until supply chains and administrative oversight are significantly improved, zero-balance billing remains more aspirational than fully functional.

A critical reflection is also necessary on resource allocation. Current spending priorities often focus on high-profile, expensive projects like specialized hospitals and advanced diagnostics. These initiatives typically benefit a relatively small, predominantly urban segment of the population, while preventive and primary healthcare — the most cost-effective components — remain drastically underfunded. Preventive measures, such as early screenings and chronic disease management programs, do not generate immediate headlines but are significantly more impactful in reducing long-term healthcare costs and improving population health outcomes.

Dialysis coverage, substantially increased under recent reforms, is commendable for alleviating financial burdens on patients suffering from kidney disease. Yet each dialysis patient represents a preventable healthcare system failure, often due to unmanaged diabetes or hypertension. Redirecting resources towards community education, early interventions, and better chronic disease management could substantially decrease the number of patients requiring dialysis. Such proactive investment in preventive care would result in better health outcomes and more efficient use of limited healthcare funds.

Staffing remains one of the most critical issues affecting the healthcare system. Despite infrastructure expansions, the severe shortage of medical professionals continues unabated. Many healthcare workers leave the Philippines annually, drawn overseas by significantly better compensation and improved working conditions. Without addressing this issue directly and decisively through better salaries, working environments, and clear career paths, healthcare reform efforts will inevitably fall short. Facilities without adequately compensated healthcare workers can never fully realize their potential.

Moreover, while recent reforms have expanded training programs and scholarships to produce more healthcare professionals domestically, these efforts alone will not resolve the workforce crisis. Many newly trained medical professionals still seek opportunities abroad, driven by persistent disparities in pay and working conditions. It is critical that healthcare reforms include comprehensive strategies to retain trained personnel, such as enhanced salary structures, better career development pathways, and improvements in workplace environments. These adjustments will ensure that investments in healthcare training result in meaningful, long-term benefits for local communities.

Enhancing transparency and accountability within the healthcare system is paramount. Funds allocated to healthcare must be closely monitored to prevent misuse or mismanagement, ensuring that resources genuinely benefit patient care. Establishing clear performance indicators and regular audits can help guarantee that healthcare spending achieves intended outcomes. Without robust oversight, even the most well-intentioned policies risk falling short.

Furthermore, effective collaboration between national and local government units is essential. Health services at the local level frequently suffer from uneven funding and implementation. Bridging this gap through improved coordination, clear communication and aligned objectives can greatly enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare delivery across regions.

Finally, active engagement with healthcare professionals in policymaking processes can significantly improve policy relevance and practical implementation. Those working directly with patients have invaluable insights into system strengths and weaknesses. Policymakers should regularly consult with frontline healthcare workers to develop realistic, achievable goals and strategies that genuinely address the needs of both patients and providers.

Ultimately, the success of healthcare reform is measured not by political announcements or physical infrastructure alone, but by tangible improvements in patient experiences and outcomes. Effective reform requires a comprehensive approach that equally emphasizes infrastructure, workforce retention, preventive healthcare and meticulous policy implementation.

From my frontline perspective, true healthcare transformation demands addressing these systemic issues honestly and urgently. Facilities, policies and intentions mean little without effective, consistent execution. Our healthcare reforms must translate into real benefits for patients across the Philippines — not just in urban centers or select communities, but universally, reaching every family in every community.

Real healthcare reform is about more than infrastructure — it’s about fundamentally improving the lives of those we serve. Only when our policies and investments align clearly and consistently with this mission will we truly achieve the promise of universal healthcare.