The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) supports the House of Representatives (HOR) which is now prioritizing measures to allow Filipinos better access to dental health in their localities.
House Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez has recently expressed his support for such initiatives as he mentioned that the 19th Congress is pushing for legislations which guarantee that "every city and municipal health unit includes a dental service as part of its primary health care offering."
"The Commission remains firm that access to oral health is a human rights issue," the CHR said in a statement.
It declared: "Across the globe, it is evident that dental services are still disproportionately limited, especially for the vulnerable populations. A rights-based approach to every Filipino’s access to safe and affordable public health services is incumbent upon the duty-bearers to ensure that policies and mechanisms are in place for a stable health system structure."
It said that through the recently passed Universal Health Care Act under Republic Act No. 11223, the Philippine government emphasised the need for all citizens to be "granted immediate eligibility and access to ... dental health services, delivered either as population-based or individual-based health services."
Given this law, the CHR said that it is part of the duty of Congress to craft policies and programs that primarily protect and promote the right of Filipinos to accessible and safe dental health services.
"In upholding a people-oriented approach for the delivery of health services, the Commission is one with the Philippine government in ensuring that all Filipinos are provided with adequate support through the efforts of duty-bearers to craft laws which directly respond to this concern. After all, included in our inherent right to health are services which also prioritise oral health, regardless of socio-economic status, age, and gender, among others," the CHR stressed.