
The Healthway Cancer Care Hospital (HCCH) said it aims to expand its hospital beds to 75 this year to assist more cancer patients in minimizing hospital costs amid medical inflation.
鈥We should be, roughly, by the end of the year, maybe 75 beds already,鈥 HCCH Chief Operating Officer Manuel Francisco 鈥淩amy鈥 T. Roxas told聽 大象传媒聽 in an interview.
鈥Many of our treatments is outpatient鈥 So, the inpatient beds are really for surgical patients,鈥 he added. 鈥淥ur goal is to lower the out-of-pocket expenses of the patient.鈥
According to the Philippine Cancer Society (PCS), the country logs over 150,000 new cancer cases annually. Breast and cervical cancer affect most Filipinos, with 27,000 and 7,200 cases detected respectively, per year.
As many Filipinos grapple with the life-threatening disease, the Perpetual Help Medical Center – Las Pi帽as (PHMC-LP) said that 40.6% of cancer patients鈥 families face financial strain due to high treatment costs.
The PHMC-LP noted that the cost of cancer treatment in the Philippines ranges from P120,000 to over P1 million, with the mean out-of-pocket expenses reaching P181,789.00.
With government benefits and a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) card, Mr. Roxas said patients roughly pay 50% of the treatment from their own pockets. To help ease the financial burden, HCCH offers treatment packages for surgery and chemotherapy.
鈥We look at what鈥檚 out there in the hospitals, and we always try to be cheaper than them without losing profitability,鈥 said Mr. Roxas. 聽 鈥淚f you鈥檙e talking about the big ones [hospital], we are 15 to 20% cheaper.鈥
The hospital鈥檚 network with other pharmaceutical companies also helps maintain cheaper treatment costs as the Middle East war fuels medical inflation.
鈥What鈥檚 difficult with cancer treatment, when there鈥檚 a new medicine which has proven to be effective, the cost of that medicine also increases,鈥 he said.
鈥We negotiate with them, we work with them to try to bring down the acquisition cost of these drugs so that we can also offer them cheaper to our patients, no matter how expensive they are,鈥 he added.
HCCH is the first cancer specialty hospital in the Philippines, and is part of the Healthway Medical Network Inc. under Ayala Corporation鈥檚 AC Health.
AC Health鈥檚 pharmaceutical portfolio includes Generika, St. Joseph Drug, IE Medica, and MedEthix.
鈥All of this allows us to weather this crisis better,鈥 said Mr. Roxas. 鈥淥ur drug importation arm will be able to access drugs, and they already do from India, from China, which makes it cheaper for our patients.鈥
In March, the Department of Health (DoH) launched the National Cancer Grid. The flagship framework aims to standardize cancer care across regions, integrate data silos, and ensure that no Filipino is left behind.
Health Secretary Teodoro J. Herbosa said the government aims to increase screening, diagnosis, and treatment by 50% by 2028. 鈥 Almira Louise S. Martinez


