Gov. Gwen Garcia welcomed the Department of Health’s elevation of the Cebu Provincial Hospital in Balamban (CPH Balamban) into Level 2 status — the first among Capitol-run hospitals to be accredited as such by DOH.
The formal turnover of the License to Operate a Level 2 Hospital, signed by DOH 7 director Dr. Jaime Bernadas, was done at CPH Balamban on June 18. It was received by Gov. Gwen Garcia, third district Congressman Pablo John Garcia, and hospital chief Dr. Olivia Dandan from Mr. Filman Brubo of DOH 7’s Local Health Support Division.
“Kini atong mga ospital, naningkamot ta nga ato gyud ni ma-upgrade because every Cebuano, adunahan man o kabus, is deserving of the best services,” Gov. Garcia said.
The governor added that three other CPHs, namely: CPH Carcar, CPH Danao, and CPH Bogo, are already in the process of complying with their Level 2 accreditation.
Bantayan District Hospital has been elevated to Level 1 in April this year, while other district hospitals in the province, especially the Ricardo L. Maningo Memorial Hospital in San Francisco, Camotes, are also on their way to becoming Level 1 hospitals.
According to the DOH website, Level 1 hospitals provide emergency care and treatment, general administrative and ancillary services, primary care of prevalent diseases in the locality, and clinical services such as general medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and non-surgical gynecology, and minor surgery.
Level 1 hospitals must have, at the minimum, an operating room, a recovery room, maternity facilities, isolation facilities, a clinical laboratory, an imaging facility and a pharmacy, all of which should be licensed by the Department of Health (DOH).
Level 2 hospitals, on top of the requirements for Level 1, must be departmentalized and should have intensive care units, respiratory therapy services, a tertiary clinical laboratory and a Level 2 imaging facility with mobile X-ray equipment.
On the same event, the Capitol unveiled the expanded hemodialysis center at CPH Balamban which received 15 additional hemodialysis machines on top of its 10 working units — bringing its total machines to 25. It is the biggest hemodialysis center among all Capitol-run dialysis centers. | SN