New UNICEF Rep is a Balikbayan

UNICEF PG Rep Lotta Sylwander

UNICEF PH Rep Lotta Sylwander

For Lotta Sylwander, her assignment to the Philippines as UNICEF Representative, is actually a homecoming.
Sylwander, from Sweden, was a backpack tourist way back in the 70’s and 80’s. She met and married (they are now divorced) someone from the Rojas family of Cavite. They have two children.

Sylwander arrived in Manila last April and has since immersed herself in UNICEF’s various projects with major focus on typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan)–ravaged areas.

An anthropologist, Sylwander was previously assigned in Vietnam and Zambia.

She is with Bangladeshi Zafrin Chowdhury, chief of Communication and Private Fundraising and Partnership, UNICEF Philippines, who arrived here more than eight months ago, just before the super typhoon struck the Philippines claimed the lives of some 10,000 people, and displaced tens of thousands more.

Before coming to the Philippines, Chowdhury, a former journalist, was in Myanmar where she led UNICEF’s communication efforts “through a complex democratic transition and gradual opening up for information and media scenario.”

Zafrin Chowdhury

Zafrin Chowdhury

Lotta and Zafrin met with a group of women columnists last Monday at the cozy Maria Luisa Garden Room in Makati. Chef Robert Lilja, a Swede, prepared special herring appetizers to welcome a distinguished compatriot.

Sylwander said almost six million children (a human being below the age of 18 years ) were affected by Yolanda. UNICEF, in close coordination with government agencies and local governments, has spent $140 million for Yolanda victims.

Sylwander said one of the first projects of UNICEF immediately after Yolanda devastated a number of provinces in the Visayas on Nov. 8, 2013 was the restoration of clean water system. That’s the reason why there has not been an outbreak of diseases caused by contaminated water.

They have also re-started their vaccination program.

Sylwander and Chowdhury talked about the impact of UNICEF ‘s Unconditional Cash Grants to vulnerable households affected by Typhoon Yolanda. They have allotted P6 million for 10,000 families.

They are giving each household $100 a month for six month to rebuild their lives. No conditions unlike that the World Bank -supported Conditional Cash Transfer (Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino) by the Department of Social Services and Developments which sets educational and healthcare requirements for children of beneficiary families.

UNICEF’s Unconditional Cash grant is an emergency measure to provide quick relief to families with children.
Sylwander said she is impressed that many of the beneficiary families of their Unconditional Cash Grant were able to set aside savings from the $100 a month that they give to start a means of livelihood like a bicycle or tricycle or a fishing boat.

Tacloban children displaced by Yolanda. Screengrab from ABS-CBN.

Tacloban children displaced by Yolanda. Screengrab from ABS-CBN.

UNICEF also has a “school-in-a box” project which is “Everything you would need in a classroom in a box,” said Sylwander.They have also distributed 500,000 backpacks complete with school supplies to children in Yolanda-affected areas.

Beyond the Yolanda-devastated areas, Sylwander said she is concerned about high incidence of “stunting” among Filipino children who compose some 50 percent of population.

Stunting is chronic malnutrition and affects 30 per cent of Filipino children. That would be in the numbers of some 28 million.

She said the first five years of a child’s life is critical and he or she should be adequately nourished.
Stunting, she said, has far-reaching effects not only on the child but on the people and the nation. She said a chronically malnourished child does not develop fully physically, intellectually, mentally.

It goes without saying that a stunted child would not be able to perform well in school. If he or she performed poorly in school, he or she would not be inadequate in coping in a competitive society.

Both Lotta and Zafrin speak admirably of the Filipinos’ “resilience” amidst grief.

Orion Health Partners With The Medical City Philippines

New Zealand-owned global health software company Orion Health has announced a partnership with The Medical City (TMC), the premier Philippine health institution.

TMC operates a network of hospitals located in Angeles and Iloilo and medical clinics located mainly in Metro Manila. It will soon be opening hospitals in Clark and Guam. The Medical City main facility along Ortigas Avenue in Pasig City is a world class tertiary care hospital and healthcare complex with 1,000 physicians and 2,200 staff serving some 40,000 in-patients and 400,000 out-patients annually.

Orion Health’s software products are used in more than 30 countries by hundreds of thousands of clinicians to facilitate care for tens of millions of patients.

Orion Health CEO Ian McCrae said Orion Health’s and TMC’s visions are aligned. “TMC’s vision is all about working in partnership with the patient, and we are also focussed on patient-centric care. Our goal is a long lasting partnership with TMC that will enable us to provide better software to other healthcare organisations in South East Asia.”

At the heart of TMC’s service philosophy are new paradigms of hospital care addressing the entire continuum of health needs, and treating the patient as an equal, informed and empowered partner.

“As The Medical City expands its national footprint, it enters into a partnership with global leader Orion Health to build a flexible technology infrastructure that can support physicians and empower our patient partners,” said Dr. Alfredo R. A. Bengzon, TMC’s President and CEO.

“Orion Health’s proven global experience in providing powerful information sharing capabilities and its commitment to quality patient care convinced us that they are indeed suited to help us in delivering care to our patients in today’s changing healthcare landscape,” he added.

TMC has bought Orion Health’s Enterprise Electronic Health Record (EHR) system. Orion Health’s solution will provide a unified view of patient data across the healthcare organisation via an easy-to-use web-based interface that is accessible anywhere, anytime. It’s implementation will help to reduce medical errors, increase medical staff efficiency and reduce costs.

To support the partnership Orion Health is opening an office in Manila that will become a South East Asian hub as the company grows and invests in the region.

Healthway gets two nods from Reader’s Digest Asia

Healthway Medical officials give their biggest smiles upon receiving the Reader’s Digest Asia Most Trusted Brand for Ambulatory Clinics Platinum Awards and Marketing Excellence Award. Photo shows: (L-R) Sue Carney, Reader’s Digest Asia Pacific Editor-in-Chief; Joven Alcala, Healthway Medical Marketing Manager, Myrna Sison, Healthway Medical VP for Finance; Carmie De Leon, Healthway Medical VP for Sales and Marketing; Eleanor Bengco-Tan MD, Healthway Medical President; Femina Agcopra, Healthway Medical VP for Clinic Operations; Eva Preciosa Aquino CPA, MSA, PhD Asst., Healthway Medical VP for Finance and Shared Services; Karl Aaron Dimaano, Healthway Medical Asst. VP for Business Development,  Lyndon Patrick Dayrit MD, Healthway Medical Medical Director, Golda Camille Go, Healthway Medical Marketing Communications Head; and Elspeth Baker, Reader’s Digest Asia Pacific Marketing Manager.

 

Healthway Medical, the trusted and most preferred network of mall-based clinics, received the Platinum Most Trusted Brand award under the Ambulatory Clinics category given by Reader’s Digest Asia, on June 4 at the Crowne Plaza.

This is the second consecutive year Healthway was named a Most Trusted Brand by Reader’s Digest. This year’s award was an upgrade from the gold they received last 2013.

Healthway sees this great achievement as a validation of all itsefforts. The company treats the award as a motivation to keep its commitment to its “AlagangHealthway” promise to its customers.

“Being a recipient of this award for two straight years is a big accomplishment for the company,” said Healthway Medical President Dr. Eleanor Bengco-Tan. “We will constantly expand and think of more ways to deliver and serve the medical needs of the Philippines to keep up with expectations as a trusted brand.”

Healthway also received the marketing excellence award in the same ceremony.

“We had no idea we were going to receive this award this year and we are beyond thrilled,” said Carmie de Leon, Healthwayvice president for sales and marketing. “As a company, we only want to serve our customers better, and knowing that they are more than happy with our services and campaigns is all the acknowledgement we need.”

Every year, Reader’s Digest Asiarecognizes the most trusted brands based on votes sent in by its readers. Winners are determined by six criteria: trustworthiness and credibility, quality, value, understanding of customer needs, innovation, and corporate social responsibility.

Healthway Medical is located in Greenbelt 5, SM North EdsaThe Block, Festival Supermall, Market! Market!,Alabang Town Center, Robinson’s Place Manila and Shangri-La Plaza mall. For more information, visit www.healthway.com.ph.

The empowering effect of yoga

By Ellen T. Tordesillas, VERA Files
Photos and Video by Mario Ignacio IV and Mario I. Espinosa

The amazing thing about yoga is that you are empowering yourself without being conscious that that is what you are doing.

Yoga instructor Jasper Colina, who just opened OM Yoga Studio in Parañaque (he also teaches yoga at Fitness First), shares the experience of a female student who had fear of crossing the street. After several yoga sessions, she experienced changes within herself. She became confident with every pose she was able to accomplish and later on mustered enough courage to cross the street by herself.

Colina said most people initially go into yoga for physical fitness. In the process, however, they undergo not only physical change but also inner transformation which usually leads to a change in lifestyle—one that is gentler and more meaningful.

One of Colina’s students, Virginia Carag, attests to that.

A retired bank executive, Carag said she once ballooned to 280 pounds and was miserable. She was then taking care of her sick husband and “kain ako ng kain (I kept eating).”

One day, after her husband’s death, she was cleaning her room and saw her old photos when she was Miss PNB (Philippine National Bank). She felt depressed and cried.

She resolved to lose weight and on her own did some physical exercises like walking. But she said, “I felt there was something lacking.”

Carag became a member of Fitness First where she joined all group exercises, including yoga. The teacher then was Peewee Sanchez (now based in the Middle East), whom Carag credits for inspiring to go further in her fitness regimen.

She got hooked on yoga which she said helped her regain her focus and balance.

Balance was also Steph Bregondo’s problem. “Palagi ako noon natatapilok (I used to trip a lot),” she recalled.
In the few months she has been doing yoga—she attends Colina’s classes in Fitness First MOA and OM—Bregondo said her balance has markedly improved.

Soledad Rivera travels one-and-a-half hours from Navotas just to attend Colina’s classes at Fitness First and OM Yoga Center. “I like Jasper’s classes because there’s a lot of variety. It’s never boring,” she said.
Rivera, who in her 60s does a wheel pose or backbend flawlessly, took up yoga upon the advice of her doctor who was treating her scoliosis.

She liked it. So much that she now has her own yoga studio at home. “When I feel depressed, I do yoga,” she enthused.

Yoga Instructor Jasper Colina doing Warrior One.

Yoga Instructor Jasper Colina doing Warrior One.

Colina said yoga is uplifting because it starts from within. “It’s more than just poses. It involves emotional, mental and spiritual discipline,” he said.

Yoga traces its origin to India thousands of years ago and literally means “to yoke or join together.” It’s a discipline that brings the body and mind together in harmony.

In a gym setting, yoga puts emphasis on posture or physical exercise (asanas) and breathing (pranayama), two of the eight limbs of yoga, Colina said. The other six are yama (universal morality), niyama (personal observances), pratyahara (control of the senses), dharana (concentration and cultivating inner perceptual awareness) and dhyana (devotion, meditation on the divine).

Colina said most of the poses in yoga are lengthening and strengthening. Thus, as you practice yoga, your posture improves. You look taller, slimmer and younger.

Breathing is a core element of yoga. Proper breathing pumps more oxygen to the blood and to the brain. “If you inhale, exhale, you do a lot of cleaning,” Colina said.

A yoga class is life in a capsule. Like in life, everything is connected. Every pose is a preparation for the next pose. Until the peak or goal is accomplished.

Colina gives an example of the Warrior One pose, which celebrates the spiritual warrior/yoga practitioner’s battle against self-ignorance—the source of suffering.

“Warrior One is a very strong pose. It is not an easy pose. After 10 counts, you accomplish it. How do you apply it in your daily life? It teaches you how to face your problem. Then you will triumph. You will gain confidence,” he said.

That’s empowerment.

Yoga also teaches discipline and is a constant reminder of the folly of taking shortcuts. “You cannot go to 10 without going through one, two, three and so on and so forth,” Colina said. Just like in life, taking shortcuts in yoga could lead to injuries, problems or not achieving your goal.

That’s why it is important for a student to start from the beginning of the class and stay to the end. Said Colina: “We follow a pattern. It starts with centering or meditation, followed with sun salutation, then standing poses, sitting poses and finally Savasana or corpse pose (lying on the back, with the arms and legs spread at about 45 degrees and the eyes closed).”

Coming out of Savasana, yoga practitioners resume daily activities feeling rejuvenated.

Yoga is becoming a popular antidote to the frenetic modern lifestyle. But it remains an elitist activity.
Colina said opening OM Yoga on commuter-accessible location in Parañaque (Sotelo Business Center, 695 Quirino Avenue) is his way of bringing yoga to people who don’t go to high-end gyms and yoga studios. OM charges a reasonable fee of P200 per session.

Aside from vinyasa (flow) and ashtanga yoga, OM offers iron yoga.

“Iron yoga is our signature class. We add weights for resistance and for more toning,” Colina said.
OM Yoga also offers belly dancing and zumba.

Colina said he is working out with some yoga teacher friends a yoga program for kids, 3 to 7 years old. The poses would be patterned after nature like a bird’s pose, a turtle pose or happy baby pose. “It’s basically play,” he said.

That would be fun.

(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look at current issues. Vera is Latin for “true.”)

(For inquiries, call OM Yoga Studio 866-973; 0917-6245-271;0917-8176-478)

TMC Medical Facts: Cervical Cancer

What is Cervical Cancer?
Cancer is a disease in which certain body cells don’t function right; divide very fast; and produce too much tissue, which results in the formation of tumors.

Cervical Cancer is cancer located in the cervix, which is the lower, narrow part of the uterus (womb).

Statistics:

Cervical Cancer in the Global Context

Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer affecting women worldwide.
500,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year.

Every 2 minutes, a woman somewhere in the world dies of cervical cancer.

Cervical Cancer in the Philippines

Cervical Cancer is the second most common cancer among Filipino women.
Incidence starts rising steeply at age 35.In the Philippines, late-stage diagnosis is prevalent.
56% of Filipino women with cervical cancer will die within 5 years from the time of detection.
12 Filipino women die of cervical cancer every day.

What Causes Cervical Cancer?

Cervical Cancer is caused by the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV).
HPV is a very common virus and is easily transmitted. It is resistant to heat and desiccation.

How is the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) Transmitted?

You can get it through skin-to-skin (rubbing) genital contact:

  • Even without sexual penetration
  • Condoms may reduce the risk but do not ensure 100% protection
  • Even dead cells shed during intercourse can contain HPV and remain infective for days.
  • Can All HPVs Cause Cervical Cancer?

There are many types of HPV but only cancer-causing strains could lead to cervical cancer.
Worldwide, HPV strains 16, 18, 45, and 31 together are responsible for more than 80% of cervical cancer cases.

What are the Risk Factors?

  • Young age at sexual debut
  • High number of pregnancies
  • Smoking (current)
  • Long-term use of oral contraceptives
  • Sexually transmitted infection

What are the Signs that I Should Look Out for if I Have Cervical Cancer?

Early Cervical Cancer generally produces NO signs or symptoms. However, as the cancer progresses, these signs and symptoms may appear:

  • Vaginal bleeding after intercourse, between periods or after menopause
  • Watery, bloody vaginal discharge that may be heavy and have a foul odor
  • Pelvic pain or pain during intercourse

Who is at Risk?

Every woman is at risk.

How is Cervical Cancer Detected?

Regular screening can detect pre-cancerous lesions through either:

  • PAP smear
  • HPV DNA Test
  • Visual inspection with acetic acid

When Should I Get a PAP Smear?

  • Begin testing about 3 years after start of sexual activity but not earlier than 21.
  • Get a pap smear every year until age 30. After age 30, women who have had 3 consecutive normal results on annual PAP smears can be re screened every 2 to 3 years.
  • Screening may be done if the woman has abnormal vaginal bleeding, pain, sores, or itching.

The risk of developing cervical cancer is three to ten times greater in women who have not been screened.