Filipino doctors, nurses and other health care workers with existing job contracts are now allowed to leave the country after the Philippine government recalled its deployment ban.
Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. tweeted that the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) overseeing the government’s response to the COVID-19 crisis had heeded his appeal to overturn the decision to stop medical workers from leaving at this time.
“DONE. NURSES, other health workers with existing contracts of work abroad can leave,” Locsin tweeted on Monday night.
But those seeking to work abroad for the first time are still not allowed to depart.
“Future applications frozen until further notice provided all our 450,000+ nurses—exceeding by 250,000 ideal WHO (World Health Organization) ratio of people-to-nurses—must be given employment,” he added.
Chief presidential legal counsel Salvador Panelo said the IATF reviewed on Monday its stand on the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) deployment ban, which had prevented several doctors, nurses and other health workers from leaving the country.
“During the IATF meeting, [the task force]reconsidered the policy on the travel ban on health workers. Those with existing perfected employment contracts will be able to leave,” Panelo said in a text message to the Inquirer.
Panelo however said the IATF resolution detailing the amendment was “subject to the approval of the President.”
In an earlier resolution, the POEA governing board said the deployment of health workers was suspended “until the national state of emergency is lifted and until COVID-19-related travel restrictions are lifted at the destination country.”
The move, it said, aimed to “prioritize human resource allocation for the national health-care system at the time of the national state of emergency.”
Locsin ranted over the weekend on Twitter against fellow Cabinet members in the IATF, protesting that the ban was unfair to nurses and other health-care workers who endured minimal pay and long working hours in their own country.
“You are not slaves; governments never helped nurses to study, get their degrees, get started, stopped their abuse by public and private hospitals that made them pay to get experience,” he had said in one of his tweets.
An opposition lawmaker defended the temporary ban, saying it was within the bounds of the Constitution.
But Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said the ban must come with corresponding benefits for health workers who volunteered their services in the country’s effort to contain or slow the spread of COVID-19.
In a statement, Lagman cited Section 6 of the Bill of Rights in the 1987 Constitution, stating that “[n]either shall the right to travel be impaired except in the interest of national security, public safety or public health, as may be provided by law.”
It could not be considered “involuntary servitude,” he said, because medical professionals and workers “are not forced to render service in the country but they are encouraged to volunteer with adequate compensation.”
Balanga Bishop Ruperto Santos said only new Filipino health-care workers should be covered by the ban.
“We need them here and there are jobs here,” said Santos, vice chair of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines–Episcopal Commission on Migrants and Itinerant People.
Bishop Santos said health workers with existing contracts should be allowed to leave, stressing that contracts should be honored. They “are now our contribution for care, healing and cure to the world affected by this COVID-19 pandemic,” he said. (Source: INQUIRER.net)