Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Tips from the first time rallyists

N.B. - This article was first published on Sept. 28 at UPIU.com
http://www.upiu.com/articles/tips-from-the-first-time-rallyists

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It was Joan and Brian’s “baptism by the streets”. And more than the ideals of activism and personal advocacies, they also learned some useful tips to prepare them for the streets on their next rally.

On September 24, students from different colleges and universities in the Philippines staged a nationwidewalkout in participation to the National Youth Protest Day Against Budget Cut on Education. The street of Manila, the country’s capital, was flooded with thousands of youth and students all in red. Amidst the honking of cars jammed in traffic, and spectators, the waving flags, eye-catcher banners and synchronized shouts of rallyists dominated the busy afternoon streets.

Protesters denounce the current administration’s state abandonment of the education sector, specifically to state universities and colleges. Both coming from the state-run University of the Philippines which received one of the biggest budget cut of 1.39 billion pesos, Joan and Brian were more than prepared to walkout from their Friday classes.

At first, Brian was unsure of joining the protest. He was hesitant to skip three of his classes, but realizing that a lot of other students are willing to walkout, he felt compelled to commit a sacrifice.

“Thinking about it, my participation was just a speck, my small contribution to the fight” , Brian said.

Joan’s expectation was a mix of excitement and fear. Being open to adventures and new experiences, the idea of joining a long queue of students excites her. On the other hand, her notions of a violently dispersed demonstration and clash with the police gave her pinches of worry.

“It was funny I was imagining myself bleeding on the head at the end of the day,” she jokingly admitted.

Having the first hand experience of long walks, with runs and jogs in betweens, of frying heat from the sun and of smog and pollution from the metro, Joan and Brian gave some tips to prepare themselves for the next rally:

1. Bring an extra shirt. Kilometric walks and unforgiving heat will surely drench anyone in sweat after a protest rally. It is better to bring some clothes to change after.

“We were fortunate the fire trucks did not water the protesters down. We would be going home soaking wet, if ever,” Brian added, realizing the importance of bringing a clean, dry shirt.

2. A good, absorbent face towel will also do a great help.

3. Liters and liters of drinking water is important: to keep you hydrated after sweating profusely, to help your throat after chanting on the top of your lungs, and to give some to those who forget to bring their own.

Bringing not even a drop of water, both first timers settled to refresh themselves with ice candies sold by street vendors.

4. Wear a good pair of walking shoes.

5. If available, protect your skin and put some lotion with sunblock. An umbrella, baseball cap or colored shades could also ease the heat.

6. Perfume, cologne and/ or baby powder could also help you refresh afterwards.

It would be a bit embarrassing to be shunned by co-commuters in a jam-packed bus or train on the ride home because we stink, Joan said.

7. But most of all, one should prepare one’s self.

Both agreed that one should be ready against the sun, to drip from wet and to be dripped on with sweat. There would be no room to be choosy and finicky along the streets. What people came for is to bring their redresses and cries to the public, and they came there expecting no special treatments or comfort.

“What you will go to is not a party,” Brian said. Joan nods in return.


Brian Galon, 19, and Joan Sebastian, 18, are first year students both taking BA Filipino at the College of Arts and Letters, University of the Philippines-Diliman, Quezon City.

Caught in the nursing boom and bust

N.B. - Article initially published in UPIU.com on Sept.20
http://www.upiu.com/articles/caught-in-the-nursing-boom-and-bust


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“Maybe we were promising to professionally do a job we might not actually fulfill.”

This seems to be the sentiments of Jona and Yna, two of the thousands who took their Oath of Professional as nurses on September 20, 2010 at theSMX Convention Center, Pasay City. Together with some 8,000 others all in white, the start of their life as professional nurses also marks a rather blurry beginning in pursuing the career they have chosen.

After completing their four-year degree in nursing last March at the College of Nursing from Our Lady of Fatima University (OLFU) in Valenzuela, Jona Guimbangunan and Yna Reyes were just two of the 37, 679 other passers who are now in the limbo of uncertainty. Both took the professional licensure exam last July this year, and were able to get pass out of the 91, 008 who took it. And now, they are an automatic addition to the ballooning unemployed, and underemployed, nurses.

Both felt really happy that they have finally took the oath. Reyes on the other hand felt different.

“Thinking about other students, knowing all of us paid (for the high expenses of our education) yet not everybody passed, I was just thankful that I was able take that step forward”, Reyes said half-heartedly.

“But I felt more uplifted after passing the qualifying exam at our school and after graduation. That was when I felt more relieved”, Guimbangunan added.

According to them, OLFU holds an exam on their last semester before graduating where only those who pass are allowed to take the biannual licensure exam. About 4,000 graduated from the 2010 batch where both belong but only 2,500 fresh graduates were able to take the licensure exam. Out of this, OLFU garnered a passing rate of 47 percent for first time takers.

Certain needs

The Professional Regulatory Commission says that the country is producing nurses far greater than its actual need. Report shows that before the July exam, about 187,000 nurses are currently unemployed yet only 7,000 nursing positions are available in both public and private hospitals.

However, it is the opposite that Reyes believes.

“Sometimes patient would complain, when they came to the hospital they were sick but because of the long wait they would eventually feel better”, she said after experiencing actual work in an extremely undermanned hospital as student nurse.

Guimbangunan agrees. “Hospitals usually take advantage of student nurses, making them do regular nurse work to compensate the hospital’s shortcomings”, she said.

Ironically, PRC admits in a report that the nurse to patient ratio in reality is 1:50, a widened margin from the ideal 1:5 ratio.

“During thypoons when classes are suspended and student nurses are not on duty, I doubt if regular hospital nurses could handle the job with the volume of patients”, Reyes recalls.

Uncertain opportunity

Realizing the country’s medical need for nurses and health workers, both do not put the opportunity of working in a local hospital number one on their priority list.

“My classmate in college was able to work as a nurse in Dubai after passing the licensure exam even without any work experience. Jona and I are eyeing for the same opportunity”, Reyes considering the Middle East as the new green pasture for nurses replacing US and Europe.

With the long lines of surplus nurses, local hospitals usually offer lower salary compared abroad.

Dr. Gene Nisperos of Health Alliance for Democracy (HEAD) said in an interview that volunteer nurses, who actually pay just to gain clinical experience (that will give them a more edgy resumé), are also used by hospitals rather than giving tenure to regular employed nurses that the hospital has.

Similarly, Guimbangunan thinks that being a nurse in the Philippines is rather gambling to a surely loosing game. In addition, the tight competition has brought many requirements such as trainings, seminars, and a master’s degree – that is, shelling out more money.

“Our tuition for semester averages to more or less 35, 000 pesos. We want to give back to what our parents have outsourced to provide our schooling”, she said.

Reports estimate that a four year nursing tuition fee alone costs around 400, 000 pesos, exclusive of books, medical tools and instruments, and personal expenses. This sum may go higher depending on the school.

“Prices of commodities are high nowadays. The current meager salary of local nurses will never make ends meet”, Reyes reasoned out.

Hopes and regrets

The nursing boom seems to bust now.

Guimbangunan recalls that OLFU has about 80 class sections (each section comprised of 40-50 nursing students) during their time in 2006. Now, it has declined to less than 20.

Several nursing schools that have sprouted during the nursing hype in 2006 have been shut close due to low or zero passing rate in the past licensure exams. The Philippine Nurses Association thinks that new nurses lack skills and competency to be sent abroad. Mostly, now that other countries have also started exporting their health service manpower.

Now that the call center industry, which hires even high school and vocational-course graduate and offers relatively more generous salary, takes the local spotlight while nursing is dimmed off, Reyes and Guimbangunan can not help but somehow regret being caught in the middle of a sinking industry.

Reyes recalls a parent saying to her daughter during the oath taking ceremony, “We could have opted to save money and not study in college if we knew that call centers would come.” And Reyes and Guimbangunan seems to consider the alternative if the search for a nursing position becomes too elusive.

HEAD believes that providing nurses with career options within the government health care system, making it a viable career for them, could make working overseas a choice rather than a necessity to local nurses due to poor compensation.

“We believe that our local nurses have the competency. We have been through overpopulated hospitals with poor or lacking equipments yet we can still deliver good service”, Reyes reasoned out.

Asked what can make nurses fulfill their professional duty for their people and their contry above else, both laments, “Considering the money we used to finish school, it is still the salary, a just compensation, that can make nurses stay and work here.”