Speaker Ferdinand Martin Romualdez inaugurated on Tuesday another legacy project of the administration of President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., a cancer center in the City of Manila named after the Speaker’s father, a press release from the House of Representatives said.
“Your solidarity with the goal of the administration of President Marcos to leave behind a legacy of healthcare emboldens us to aspire for even higher goals,” he said during Monday’s groundbreaking ceremonies of the Gov. Benjamin Romualdez Cancer Center at the grounds of Ospital ng Maynila.
The leader of the House of Representatives lauded the government officials who helped build the facility, led by Manila Mayor Honey Lacuña, saying this is where “even the poorest among us can access top-tier medical care without the fear of financial ruin.”
The House leader expressed gratitude to other officials like Public Works Secretary Manuel Bonoan, and other House leaders like his wife Rep. Yedda Romualdez, Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe, and House appropriations committee chair Zaldy Co, for making the cancer center a reality.
“I have first-hand knowledge on this (cancer), losing my father to this dreaded disease. Here and now, I commit to fully support the completion of this medical facility that bears his name,” the Speaker said, noting this is “another step in the realization of the promise” for more hospitals.
According to him, this is in compliance with the National Integrated Cancer Control Act (NICCA), or Republic Act (RA) Number 11215, which former President Duterte signed and enacted into law in 2019, or three years after he assumed office in mid-2016.
Romualdez clarified though that the “hospital is not the building alone.” “It has to be staffed by specialists and staff and workers who shall attend to the needs of patients from Manila and nearby areas.”
“I am grateful that the City of Manila, with its capable doctors and medical practitioners, has taken on this important challenge – not just to provide patients with affordable yet effective treatments for cancer in advanced stages, but enable early cancer detection for better outcomes,” he said.
The first local government cancer facility, the 5-storey center has a capacity of 38 beds and is equipped with state-of-the-art medical technology, including a Linear Accelerator, Spect Gamma Camera with Treadmill Machine and CT Scan.*