A lawmaker questioned why the Department of Health (DOH) failed to use funds worth P23 billion allocated for the department in 2022.
The money was supposed to go to public health programs that mostly related to the campaigns against COVID-19.
During the hearing of the House committee on appropriations on Thursday, Marikina second district representative Stella Quimbo asked why DOH had substantial 鈥渦nobligated funds.鈥
Unobligated funds are appropriated allocations that remained uncommitted or not bound by contracts at the end of the fiscal year.
Quimbo said while the department鈥檚 Special Allotment Release Order showed an obligation or usage rate of 87 percent, the unobligated funds still amounted to P23 billion.
She pointed out certain 鈥渨eak links鈥 that pushed obligation rates down.
For example, she said P4.6 billion of the P 7.9 billion funds for COVID-19 lab network commodities were unobligated.
This represented an obligation rate of only 41 percent, she lamented.
Health officer-in-charge Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire provided the answer.
She explained most of the unobligated funds were meant to procure items needed in COVID-19 tests.
鈥淎round P4.2 billion would be allocated for commodities which are RT-PCR kits [and] antigen kits.聽 Other funds were for health emergency hiring because we had to deploy personnel to laboratories for the conduct of these tests,鈥 Vergeire said.
When Quimbo asked why DOH failed to use, allow bidding, and procure the test kits, Vergeire recalled the number of COVID-19 cases during that period went down.
This development spurred changes in policies and guidelines as lesser tests were required.
鈥淲e were having decreasing cases already. We [had] changed our guidelines. That鈥檚 why the demand decreased, and our procurement was not fully utilized,鈥 Vergeire explained.
RELATED STORIES:
Blank space left in 2022 PH budget: Funds for free COVID tests
Gov鈥檛 agencies can use budget for COVID home care kits tests