DOH Pushes MAIFIP Funds Redirection to LGUs to Accelerate Zero-Balance Billing

Building on plans to extend zero-balance billing to select LGU hospitals, the Department of Health advocates redirecting additional MAIFIP funds directly to local units to bypass politicians' guarantee letters and speed up implementation amid 2026 budget debates.

Following recent announcements to include LGU hospitals in the zero-balance billing program with P1 billion in Senate funding, the Department of Health is now pushing to realign further increases to the Medical Assistance to Indigent and Financially Incapacitated Patients Program directly to LGU hospitals during bicameral conference committee talks for the 2026 national budget.

DOH Assistant Secretary Albert Domingo emphasized faster disbursement if funds go straight to LGU accounting, avoiding guarantee letters from politicians. "Mas mabilis kasi kung pupunta diretso sa LGU accounting," he told One News PH on December 15. Malacañang echoed this, with Presidential Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro stating the funds "will not be coursed through politicians" but implemented by DOH and LGU hospitals.

The DOH proposes 70-80% of funds to LGU hospitals and 20-30% to a catastrophic health fund. Critics, including Sen. JV Ejercito, argue the P51 billion MAIFIP hike contradicts the Universal Health Care Act by enabling political patronage. Senate President Pro Tempore Panfilo Lacson supports it if a provision bans guarantee letters. The House defends the allocation as aiding over 1.1 million beneficiaries. Bicam proceedings continue.

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Senators voting to reject health budget cuts during a commission hearing with Subsecretary Julio Montt speaking.
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Senate commission unanimously rejects health budget cut

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The Senate Health Commission agreed to reject the 2.5% budget cut to the Ministry of Health. Subsecretary Julio Montt defended efficiency measures before senators and unions.

The Philippine Health Insurance Corp. confirmed that P60 billion has been returned to PhilHealth from the National Treasury. The agency said the funds will support efforts to expand and improve healthcare services.

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The Sandiganbayan has opened proceedings against former health secretary Francisco Duque III and former budget official Lloyd Christopher Lao over alleged irregularities in a P41.46-billion fund transfer during the COVID-19 pandemic.

One month after the nationwide oncology sanitary alert took effect, Health Minister May Chomali led the signing of a decree transferring $154 billion from the Ministry of Hacienda to the Ministry of Health (Minsal). The funds will exclusively support the Oncology Alert Plan, enhancing public health services' capacity to resolve oncology waiting lists affecting thousands of patients.

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The Department of Budget and Management has identified P238 billion in funding to support the government's response to the ongoing global oil crisis, under President Marcos's directive. DBM Secretary Rolando Toledo shared this during a House committee on ways and means hearing on April 8. It comes alongside a mandated 20 percent cut in non-essential government spending.

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