Some uncompleted draft book review from my twitter last 2023:
Dr. Tiongco is so inspiring.
When thinking about the reason why I want to become a doctor, I am sometimes distracted by the blinding lights of fortune it promises in the long haul, all while I am helping people through a thing I believe I am passionate about.
But by reading this book, I am reminded that healthcare in the Philippines is far from the cool-med-solving-cases and grinning fortune past the huge student loans that it has, as often depicted on mainstream media.
At the author's time, UPCM, the country's premier medical school, was teaching through Americanized perceptions of medicinal education. These focused merely on the study of the cell, enzymes, processes, body parts, and the disease.
All while crucial to their education, these were bulletless pistols on the battle ground they were set to face in -- the PGH Grounds, which was and still is the nation's medical forefront on the healthcare needs of the Filipino masses.
As the medical forefront,...(for some reason I wasn't able to finish this part of the thread)
Yes, they knew how to determine and diagnose the situations they were faced to in their shifts, but they weren't prepared for what's about to come.
Past the study of body and the disease, PH Healthcare should include the rationale of the following why's:
> Why do PH hospitals accomodate more than what they can?(??wording doesnt sound nice)
> Why are healthcare professionals in the PH underpaid?(??seconded, wording also kinda doesnt sound nice)
> Why do healthcare professionals opt to leave the country for better pay after being trained in their homecountry which has a shortage of competent doctors?(??)
Maybe I should've chosen Public Health as a premed instead, sige nalang 😭
[the views and opinions of the host last 2023 (which still seem to have some loose threads around the edges sjbdjd; in short, naalala na ang deadlines that week 😂) do not fully reflect her views and opinions now at 2025
- I think I wasn't able to finish this draft review since I immediately sprung unto the next PH med book I had (SDYCSTA), and it may have provided me a slightly different, more modern approach to seeing the PH healthcare system. And, I am yet to recall those insights (i should prob reread these again)]