Republic of the Philippines
Congress of the Philippines
Metro Manila
Tenth Congress
Republic Act No. 8504
February 13, 1998
AN ACT PROMULGATING POLICIES AND PRESCRIBING MEASURES FOR
THE PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF HIV/AIDS IN THE PHILIPPINES, INSTITUTING A
NATIONWIDE HIV/AIDS INFORMATION AND EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM, ESTABLISHING A
COMPREHENSIVE HIV/AIDS MONITORING SYSTEM, STRENGTHENING THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL
AIDS COUNCIL, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives
of the Philippines in Congress assembled::
Section 1. Title. – This Act shall be known as the
"Philippine AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 1998."
Section 2. Declaration of policies. – Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is a disease that recognizes no territorial, social,
political and economic boundaries for which there is no known cure. The gravity
of the AIDS threat demands strong State action today, thus:
(a) The State shall promote public awareness about the
causes, modes of transmission, consequences, means of prevention and control of
HIV/AIDS through a comprehensive nationwide educational and information
campaign organized and conducted by the State. Such campaigns shall promote
value formation and employ scientifically proven approaches, focus on the
family as a basic social unit, and be carried out in all schools and training
centers, workplaces, and communities. This program shall involve affected
individuals and groups, including people living with HIV/AIDS.
(b) The State shall extend to every person suspected or
known to be infected with HIV/AIDS full protection of his/her human rights and
civil liberties. Towards this end:
(1) compulsory HIV testing shall be considered unlawful
unless otherwise provided in this Act;
(2) the right to privacy of individuals with HIV shall be
guaranteed;
(3) discrimination, in all its forms and subtleties,
against individuals with HIV or persons perceived or suspected of having HIV
shall be considered inimical to individual and national interest; and
(4) provision of basic health and social services for
individuals with HIV shall be assured.
(c) The State shall promote utmost safety and universal
precautions in practices and procedures that carry the risk of HIV
transmission.
(d) The State shall positively address and seek to
eradicate conditions that aggravate the spread of HIV infection, including but
not limited to, poverty, gender inequality, prostitution, marginalization, drug
abuse and ignorance.
(e) The State shall recognize the potential role of
affected individuals in propagating vital information and educational messages
about HIV/AIDS and shall utilize their experience to warn the public about the
disease.
Section 3. Definition of terms. – As used in this Act,
the following terms are defined as follows:
(a) "Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
(AIDS)" – a condition characterized by a combination of signs and symptoms,
caused by HIV contracted from another person and which attacks and weakens the
body's immune system, making the afflicted individual susceptible to other
life-threatening infections.
(b) "Anonymous Testing" – refers to an HIV
testing procedure whereby the individual being tested does not reveal his/her
true identity. An identifying number or symbol is used to substitute for the
name and allows the laboratory conducting the test and the person on whom the
test is conducted to match the test results with the identifying number or
symbol.
(c) "Compulsory HIV Testing" – refers to HIV
testing imposed upon a person attended or characterized by the lack of or
vitiated consent, use of physical force, intimidation or any form of
compulsion.
(d) "Contact tracing" – refers to the method of
finding and counselling the sexual partner(s) of a person who has been
diagnosed as having sexually transmitted disease.
(e) "Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)" –
refers to the virus which causes AIDS.
(f) "HIV/AIDS Monitoring" – refers to the
documentation and analysis of the number of HIV/AIDS infections and the pattern
of its spread.
(g) "HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control" – refers
to measures aimed at protecting non-infected from contracting HIV and
minimizing the impact of the condition of persons living with HIV.
(h) "HIV-positive" – refers to the presence of
HIV infection as documented by the presence of HIV or HIV antibodies in the
sample being tested.
(i) "HIV-negative" – denotes the absence of HIV
or HIV antibodies upon HIV testing.
(j) "HIV Testing" – refers to any laboratory
procedure done on an individual to determine the presence or absence of HIV
infection.
(k) "HIV Transmission" – refers to the transfer
of HIV from one infected person to an uninfected individual, most commonly
through sexual intercourse, blood transfusion, sharing of intravenous needles
and during pregnancy.
(l) "High-Risk Behavior" – refers to a person's
frequent involvement in certain activities which increase the risk of
transmitting or acquiring HIV.
(m) "Informed Consent" – refers to the
voluntary agreement of a person to undergo or be subjected to a procedure based
on full information, whether such permission is written, conveyed verbally, or
expressed indirectly.
(n) "Medical Confidentiality" – refers to the
relationship of trust and confidence created or existing between a patient or a
person with HIV and his attending physician, consulting medical specialist,
nurse, medical technologist and all other health workers or personnel involved
in any counselling, testing or professional care of the former; it also applies
to any person who, in any official capacity, has acquired or may have acquired
such confidential information.
(o) "Person with HIV" – refers to an individual
whose HIV test indicates, directly or indirectly, that he/she is infected with
HIV.
(p) "Pre-Test Counselling" – refers to the
process of providing an individual information on the biomedical aspects of
HIV/AIDS and emotional support to any psychological implications of undergoing
HIV testing and the test result itself before he/she is subjected to the test.
(q) "Post-Test Counselling" – refers to the
process of providing risk-reduction information and emotional support to a
person who submitted to HIV testing at the time that the test result is
released.
(r) "Prophylactic" – refers to any agent or
device used to prevent the transmission of a disease.
(s) "Sexually Transmitted Diseases" – refers to
any disease that may be acquired or passed on through sexual contact.
(t) "Voluntary HIV Testing" – refers to HIV
testing done on an individual who, after having undergone pre-test counselling,
willingly submits himself/herself to such test.
(u) "Window Period" – refers to the period of
time, usually lasting from two weeks to six (6) months during which an infected
individual will test "negative" upon HIV testing but can actually
transmit the infection.
ARTICLE I
EDUCATION AND INFORMATION
Sec. 4. HIV/AIDS education in schools. – The Department
of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), the Commission on Higher Education
(CHED), and the Technical Education and skills Development Authority (TESDA),
utilizing official information provided by the Department of Health, shall
integrate instruction on the causes, modes of transmission and ways of
preventing HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases in subjects taught
in public and private schools at intermediate grades, secondary and tertiary
levels, including non-formal and indigenous learning systems: Provided, That if
the integration of HIV/AIDS education is not appropriate or feasible, the DECS
and TESDA shall design special modules on HIV/AIDS prevention and control:
Provided, further, That it shall not be used as an excuse to propagate birth
control or the sale or distribution of birth control devices: Provided,
finally, That it does not utilize sexually explicit materials.
Flexibility in the formulation and adoption of
appropriate course content, scope, and methodology in each educational level or
group shall be allowed after consultations with Parent-Teachers-Community
Associations, Private School Associations, school officials, and other interest
groups. As such, no instruction shall be offered to minors without adequate
prior consultation with parents who must agree to the thrust and content of the
instruction materials.
All teachers and instructors of said HIV/AIDS courses
shall be required to undergo a seminar or training on HIV/AIDS prevention and
control to be supervised by DECS, CHED and TESDA, in coordination with the
Department of Health (DOH), before they are allowed to teach on the subject.
Section 5. HIV/AIDS information as a health service. –
HIV/AIDS education and information dissemination shall form part of the delivery
of health services by health practitioners, workers and personnel. The
knowledge and capabilities of all public health workers shall be enhanced to
include skills for proper information dissemination and education on HIV/AIDS.
It shall likewise be considered a civic duty of health providers in the private
sector to make available to the public such information necessary to control
the spread of HIV/AIDS and to correct common misconceptions about this disease.
The training or health workers shall include discussions on HIV-related ethical
issues such as confidentiality, informed consent and the duty to provide
treatment.
Section 6. HIV/AIDS education in the workplace. – All
government and private employees, workers, managers, and supervisors, including
members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine
National Police (PNP), shall be provided with the standardized basic
information and instruction on HIV/AIDS which shall include topics on
confidentiality in the workplace and attitude towards infected employees and
workers. In collaboration with the Department of Health (DOH), the Secretary of
the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) shall oversee the anti-HIV/AIDS
campaign in all private companies while the Armed Forces Chief of Staff and the
Director General of the PNP shall oversee the implementation of this Section.
Section 7. HIV/AIDS education for Filipinos going abroad.
– The State shall ensure that all overseas Filipino workers and diplomatic, military,
trade, and labor officials and personnel to be assigned overseas shall undergo
or attend a seminar on the cause, prevention and consequences of HIV/AIDS
before certification for overseas assignment. The Department of Labor and
Employment or the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Department of Tourism and
the Department of Justice through the Bureau of Immigration, as the case may
be, in collaboration with the Department of Health (DOH), shall oversee the
implementation of this Section.
Section 8. Information campaign for tourists and
transients. – Informational aids or materials on the cause, modes of
transmission, prevention, and consequences of HIV infection shall be adequately
provided at all international ports of entry and exit. The Department of
Tourism, the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Department of Justice through
the Bureau of Immigration, in collaboration with the Department of Health
(DOH), shall oversee the implementation of this Act.
Section 9. HIV/AIDS education in communities. – Local
government units, in collaboration with the Department of Health (DOH), shall
conduct an educational and information campaign on HIV/AIDS. The provincial
governor, city or municipal mayor and the barangay captain shall coordinate
such campaign among concerned government agencies, non-government organizations
and church-based groups.
Section 10. Information on prophylactics. – Appropriate
information shall be attached to or provided with every prophylactic offered
for sale or given as a donation. Such information shall be legibly printed in
English and Filipino, and contain literature on the proper use of the
prophylactic device or agent, its efficacy against HIV and STD infection, as
well as the importance of sexual abstinence and mutual fidelity.
Section 11. Penalties for misleading information. –
Misinformation on HIV/AIDS prevention and control through false and misleading
advertising and claims in any of the tri-media or the promotional marketing of
drugs, devices, agents or procedures without prior approval from the Department
of Health and the Bureau of Food and Drugs and the requisite medical and
scientific basis, including markings and indications in drugs and devises or
agents, purporting to be a cure or a fail-safe prophylactic for HIV infection
is punishable with a penalty of imprisonment for two (2) months to two (2)
years, without prejudice to the imposition of administrative sanctions such as
fines and suspension or revocation of professional or business license.
ARTICLE II
SAFE PRACTICES AND PROCEDURES
Sec. 12. Requirement on the donation of blood, tissue, or
organ. – No laboratory or institution shall accept a donation of tissue or
organ, whether such donation is gratuitous or onerous, unless a sample from the
donor has been tested negative for HIV. All donated blood shall also be
subjected to HIV testing and HIV(+) blood shall be disposed of properly and
immediately. A second testing may be demanded as a matter of right by the
blood, tissue, or organ recipient or his immediate relatives before transfusion
or transplant, except during emergency cases: Provided, That donations of
blood, tissue, or organ testing positive for HIV may be accepted for research
purposes only, and subject to strict sanitary disposal requirements.
Section 13. Guidelines on surgical and similar
procedures. – The Department of Health (DOH), in consultation and in
coordination with concerned professional organizations and hospital
associations, shall issue guidelines on precautions against HIV transmission
during surgical, dental, embalming, tattooing or similar procedures. The DOH
shall likewise issue guidelines on the handling and disposition of cadavers,
body fluids or wastes of persons known or believed to be HIV-positive.
The necessary protective equipment such as gloves,
goggles and gowns, shall be made available to all physicians and health care
providers and similarly exposed personnel at all times.
Section 14. Penalties for unsafe practices and
procedures. – Any person who knowingly or negligently causes another to get
infected with HIV in the course of the practice of his/her profession through
unsafe and unsanitary practice or procedure is liable to suffer a penalty of
imprisonment for six (6) years to twelve (12) years, without prejudice to the
imposition of administrative sanctions such as, but not limited to, fines and
suspension or revocation of the license to practice his/her profession. The
permit or license of any business entity and the accreditation of hospitals,
laboratory, or clinics may be cancelled or withdrawn if said establishments
fail to maintain such safe practices and procedures as may be required by the
guidelines to be formulated in compliance with Sec. 13 of this Act.
ARTICLE III
TESTING, SCREENING AND COUNSELLING
Setion 15. Consent as a requisite for HIV testing. – No
compulsory HIV testing shall be allowed. However, the State shall encourage
voluntary testing for individuals with a high risk for contracting HIV:
Provided, That written informed consent must first be obtained. Such consent
shall be obtained from the person concerned if he/she is of legal age or from
the parents or legal guardian in the case of a minor or a mentally
incapacitated individual. Lawful consent to HIV testing of a donated human
body, organ, tissue, or blood shall be considered as having been given when:
(a) a person volunteers or freely agrees to donate
his/her blood, organ, or tissue for transfusion, transplantation, or research;
(b) a person has executed a legacy in accordance with
Sec. 3 of Republic Act No. 7170, also known as the "Organ Donation Act of
1991";
(c) a donation is executed in accordance with Sec. 4 of
Republic Act No. 7170.
Section 16. Prohibitions on compulsory HIV testing. –
Compulsory HIV testing as a precondition to employment, admission to
educational institutions, the exercise of freedom of abode, entry or continued
stay in the country, or the right to travel, the provision of medical service
or any other kind of service, or the continued enjoyment of said undertakings shall
be deemed unlawful.
Section 17. Exception to the prohibition on compulsory
testing. – Compulsory HIV testing may be allowed only in the following
instances:
a) When a person is charged with any of the crimes
punishable under Articles 264 and 266 as amended by Republic Act No. 8353, 335
and 338 of Republic Act No. 3815, otherwise known as the "Revised Penal
Code" or under Republic Act No. 7659;
b) When the determination of the HIV status is necessary
to resolve the relevant issues under Executive Order No. 309, otherwise known
as the "Family Code of the Philippines"; and
c) When complying with the provisions of Republic Act No.
7170, otherwise known as the "Organ Donation Act" and Republic Act
No. 7719, otherwise known as the "National Blood Services Act".
Section 18. Anonymous HIV testing. – The State shall
provide a mechanism for anonymous HIV testing and shall guarantee anonymity and
medical confidentiality in the conduct of such tests.
Section 19. Accreditation of HIV Testing Centers. – All
testing centers, hospitals, clinics, and laboratories offering HIV testing
services are mandated to seek accreditation from the Department of Health which
shall set and maintain reasonable accreditation standards.
Section 20. Pre-test and post-test counselling. – All
testing centers, clinics, or laboratories which perform any HIV test shall be
required to provide and conduct free pre-test counselling and post-test
counselling for persons who avail of their HIV/AIDS testing services. However,
such counselling services must be provided only by persons who meet the
standards set by the DOH.
Section 21. Support for HIV Testing Centers. – The
Department of Health shall strategically build and enhance the capabilities for
HIV testing of hospitals, clinics, laboratories, and other testing centers
primarily, by ensuring the training of competent personnel who will provide
such services in said testing sites.
ARTICLE IV
HEALTH AND SUPPORT SERVICES
Section 22. Hospital-based services. – Persons with
HIV/AIDS shall be afforded basic health services in all government hospitals,
without prejudice to optimum medical care which may be provided by special AIDS
wards and hospitals.
Section 23. Community-based services. – Local government
units, in coordination and in cooperation with concerned government agencies,
non-government organizations, persons with HIV/AIDS and groups most at risk of
HIV infection shall provide community-based HIV/AIDS prevention and care
services.
Section 24. Livelihood programs and trainings. –
Trainings for livelihood, self-help cooperative programs shall be made
accessible and available to all persons with HIV/AIDS. Persons infected with
HIV/AIDS shall not be deprived of full participation in any livelihood, self-help
and cooperative programs for reason of their health conditions.
Section 25. Control of sexually transmitted diseases. –
The Department of Health, in coordination and in cooperation with concerned
government agencies and non-government organizations shall pursue the
prevention and control of sexually transmitted diseases to help contain the
spread of HIV infection.
Section 26. Insurance for persons with HIV. – The
Secretary of Health, in cooperation with the Commissioner of the Insurance
Commission and other public and private insurance agencies, shall conduct a
study on the feasibility and viability of setting up a package of insurance
benefits and, should such study warrant it, implement an insurance coverage
program for persons with HIV. The study shall be guided by the principle that
access to health insurance is part of an individual's right to health and is
the responsibility of the State and of society as a whole.
ARTICLE V
MONITORING
Section 27. Monitoring program. – A comprehensive HIV/AIDS
monitoring program or "AIDSWATCH" shall be established under the
Department of Health to determine and monitor the magnitude and progression of
HIV infection in the Philippines, and for the purpose of evaluating the
adequacy and efficacy of the countermeasures being employed.
Section 28. Reporting procedures. – All hospitals,
clinics, laboratories, and testing centers for HIV/AIDS shall adopt measures in
assuring the reporting and confidentiality of any medical record, personal
data, file, including all data which may be accessed from various data banks or
information systems. The Department of Health through its AIDSWATCH monitoring
program shall receive, collate and evaluate all HIV/AIDS related medical
reports. The AIDSWATCH data base shall utilize a coding system that promotes
client anonymity.
Section 29. Contact tracing. – HIV/AIDS contact tracing
and all other related health intelligence activities may be pursued by the
Department of Health: Provided, That these do not run counter to the general
purpose of this Act: Provided, further, That any information gathered shall
remain confidential and classified, and can only be used for statistical and
monitoring purposes and not as basis or qualification for any employment,
school attendance, freedom of abode, or travel.
ARTICLE VI
CONFIDENTIALITY
Section 30. Medical confidentiality. – All health
professionals, medical instructors, workers, employers, recruitment agencies,
insurance companies, data encoders, and other custodians of any medical record,
file, data, or test results are directed to strictly observe confidentiality in
the handling of all medical information, particularly the identity and status
of persons with HIV.
Section 31. Exceptions to the mandate of confidentiality.
– Medical confidentiality shall not be considered breached in the following
cases:
(a) when complying with reportorial requirements in
conjunction with the AIDSWATCH programs provided in Sec. 27 of this Act;
(b) when informing other health workers directly involved
or about to be involved in the treatment or care of a person with HIV/AIDS:
Provided, That such treatment or care carry the risk of HIV transmission:
Provided, further, That such workers shall be obliged to maintain the shared
medical confidentiality;
(c) when responding to a subpoena duces tecum and
subpoena ad testificandum issued by a Court with jurisdiction over a legal
proceeding where the main issue is the HIV status of an individual: Provided,
That the confidential medical record shall be properly sealed by its lawful
custodian after being double-checked for accuracy by the head of the office or
department, hand delivered, and personally opened by the judge: Provided,
further, That the judicial proceedings be held in executive session.
Section 32. Release of HIV/AIDS test results. – All
results of HIV/AIDS testing shall be confidential and shall be released only to
the following persons:
(a) the person who submitted himself/herself to such
test;
(b) either parent of a minor child who has been tested;
(c) a legal guardian in the case of insane persons or
orphans;
(d) a person authorized to receive such results in
conjunction with the AIDSWATCH program as provided in Sec. 27 of this Act;
(e) a justice of the Court of Appeals or the Supreme
Court, as provided under subSec. (c) of this Act and in accordance with the
provision of Sec. 16 hereof.
Section 33. Penalties for violations of confidentiality.
– Any violation of medical confidentiality as provided in Sec.s 30 and 32 of
this Act shall suffer the penalty of imprisonment for six (6) months to four
(4) years, without prejudice to administrative sanctions such as fines and
suspension or revocation of the violator's license to practice his/her profession,
as well as the cancellation or withdrawal of the license to operate any
business entity and the accreditation of hospitals, laboratories or clinics.
Section 34. Disclosure to sexual partners. – Any person
with HIV is obliged to disclose his/her HIV status and health condition to
his/her spouse or sexual partner at the earliest opportune time.
ARTICLE VII
DISCRIMINATORY ACTS AND POLICIES
Section 35. Discrimination in the workplace. –
Discrimination in any form from pre-employment to post-employment, including
hiring, promotion or assignment, based on the actual, perceived or suspected
HIV status of an individual is prohibited. Termination from work on the sole
basis of actual, perceived or suspected HIV status is deemed unlawful.
Section 36. Discrimination in schools. – No educational
institution shall refuse admission or expel, discipline, segregate, deny
participation, benefits or services to a student or prospective student on the
basis of his/her actual, perceived or suspected HIV status.
Section 37. Restrictions on travel and habitation. – The
freedom of abode, lodging and travel of a person with HIV shall not be
abridged. No person shall be quarantined, placed in isolation, or refused
lawful entry into or deported from Philippine territory on account of his/her
actual, perceived or suspected HIV status.
Section 38. Inhibition from public service. – The right
to seek an elective or appointive public office shall not be denied to a person
with HIV.
Section 39. Exclusion from credit and insurance services.
– All credit and loan services, including health, accident and life insurance
shall not be denied to a person on the basis of his/her actual, perceived or
suspected HIV status: Provided, That the person with HIV has not concealed or
misrepresented the fact to the insurance company upon application. Extension
and continuation of credit and loan shall likewise not be denied solely on the
basis of said health condition.
Section 40. Discrimination in hospitals and health
institutions. – No person shall be denied health care service or be charged
with a higher fee on account of actual, perceived or suspected HIV status.
Section 41. Denial of burial services. – A deceased
person who had AIDS or who was known, suspected or perceived to be HIV-positive
shall not be denied any kind of decent burial services.
Section 42. Penalties for discriminatory acts and
policies. – All discriminatory acts and policies referred to in this Act shall
be punishable with a penalty of imprisonment for six (6) months to four (4)
years and a fine not exceeding Ten thousand pesos (P10,000.00). In addition,
licenses/permits of schools, hospitals and other institutions found guilty of
committing discriminatory acts and policies described in this Act shall be revoked.
ARTICLE VIII
THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL AIDS COUNCIL
Section 43. Establishment. – The Philippine National AIDS
Council (PNAC) created by virtue of Executive Order No. 39 dated 3 December
1992 shall be reconstituted and strengthened to enable the Council to oversee
an integrated and comprehensive approach to HIV/AIDS prevention and control in
the Philippines. It shall be attached to the Department of Health.
Section 44. Functions. – The Council shall be the central
advisory, planning and policy-making body for the comprehensive and integrated
HIV/AIDS prevention and control program in the Philippines. The Council shall
perform the following functions:
(a) Secure from government agencies concerned
recommendations on how their respective agencies could operationalize specific
provisions of this Act. The Council shall integrate and coordinate such
recommendations and issue implementing rules and regulations of this Act. The
Council shall likewise ensure that there is adequate coverage of the following:
(1) The institution of a nationwide HIV/AIDS information
and education program;
(2) The establishment of a comprehensive HIV/AIDS
monitoring system;
(3) The issuance of guidelines on medical and other
practices and procedures that carry the risk of HIV transmission;
(4) The provision of accessible and affordable HIV
testing and counselling services to those who are in need of it;
(5) The provision of acceptable health and support
services for persons with HIV/AIDS in hospitals and in communities;
(6) The protection and promotion of the rights of
individuals with HIV; and
(7) The strict observance of medical confidentiality.
(b) Monitor the implementation of the rules and
regulations of this Act, issue or cause the issuance of orders or make recommendations
to the implementing agencies as the Council considers appropriate;
(c) Develop a comprehensive long-term national HIV/AIDS
prevention and control program and monitor its implementation;
(d) Coordinate the activities of and strengthen working
relationships between government and non-government agencies involved in the
campaign against HIV/AIDS;
(e) Coordinate and cooperate with foreign and
international organizations regarding data collection, research and treatment
modalities concerning HIV/AIDS; and
(f) Evaluate the adequacy of and make recommendations
regarding the utilization of national resources for the prevention and control
of HIV/AIDS in the Philippines.
Section 45. Membership and composition. – (a) The Council
shall be composed of twenty-six (26) members as follows:
(1) The Secretary of the Department of Health;
(2) The Secretary of the Department of Education, Culture
and Sports or his representative;
(3) The Chairperson of the Commission on Higher Education
or his representative;
(4) The Director-General of the Technical Education and
Skills Development Authority or his representative;
(5) The Secretary of the Department of Labor and
Employment or his representative;
(6) The Secretary of the Department of Social Welfare and
Development or his representative;
(7) The Secretary of the Department of the Interior and
Local Government or his representative;
(8) The Secretary of the Department of Justice or his
representative;
(9) The Director-General of the National Economic and
Development Authority or his representative;
(10) The Secretary of the Department of Tourism or his
representative;
(11) The Secretary of the Department of Budget and
Management or his representative;
(12) The Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs
or his representative;
(13) The Head of the Philippine Information Agency or his
representative;
(14) The President of the League of Governors or his
representative;
(15) The President of the League of City Mayors or his
representative;
(16) The Chairperson of the Committee on Health of the
Senate of the Philippines or his representative;
(17) The Chairperson of the Committee on Health of the
House of Representatives or his representative;
(18) Two (2) representatives from organizations of
medical/health professionals;
(19) Six (6) representatives from non-government
organizations involved in HIV/AIDS prevention and control efforts or
activities; and
(20) A representative of an organization of persons
dealing with HIV/AIDS.
(b) To the greatest extent possible, appointment to the
Council must ensure sufficient and discernible representation from the fields
of medicine, education, health care, law, labor, ethics and social services;
(c) All members of the Council shall be appointed by the
President of the Republic of the Philippines, except for the representatives of
the Senate and the House of Representatives, who shall be appointed by the
Senate President and the House Speaker, respectively;
(d) The members of the Council shall be appointed not
later than thirty (30) days after the date of the enactment of this Act;
(e) The Secretary of Health shall be the permanent
chairperson of the Council; however, the vice-chairperson shall be elected by
its members from among themselves, and shall serve for a term of two (2) years;
and
(f) For members representing medical/health professional
groups and the six (6) non-government organizations, they shall serve for a
term of two (2) years, renewable upon recommendation of the Council.
Section 46. Reports. – The Council shall submit to the
President and to both Houses of Congress comprehensive annual reports on the
activities and accomplishments of the Council. Such annual reports shall
contain assessments and evaluation of intervention programs, plans and
strategies for the medium- and long-term prevention and control program on
HIV/AIDS in the Philippines.
Section 47. Creation of Special HIV/AIDS Prevention and
Control Service. – There shall be created in the Department of Health a Special
HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Service staffed by qualified medical
specialists and support staff with permanent appointment and supported with an
adequate yearly budget. It shall implement programs on HIV/AIDS prevention and
control. In addition, it shall also serve as the secretariat of the Council.
Section 48. Appropriations. – The amount of Twenty
million pesos (P20,000,000.00) shall be initially appropriated out of the funds
of the National Treasury. Subsequent appropriations shall be provided by
Congress in the annual budget of the Department of Health under the General
Appropriations Act.
ARTICLE IX
MISCELLANEOUS PROVISION
Section 49. Implementing rules and regulations. – Within
six (6) months after it is fully reconstituted, the Council shall formulate and
issue the appropriate rules and regulations necessary for the implementation of
this Act.
Section 50. Separability clause. – If any provision of
this Act is declared invalid, the remainder of this Act or any provision not
affected thereby shall remain in force and effect.
Section 51. Repealing clause. – All laws, presidential
decrees, executive orders and their implementing rules inconsistent with the
provisions of this Act are hereby repealed, amended or modified accordingly.
Section 52. Effectivity. – This Act shall take effect
fifteen (15) days after its publication in at least two (2) national newspapers
of general circulation.
Approved
(Signed)
(Signed)
JOSE DE VENECIA,
JR.
NEPTALI A. GONZALES
Speaker of the House of
President of the Senate
Representatives
This Act, which is consolidation of Senate Bill No. 1818
and House Bill No. 10510, was finally passed
by the
Senate and the House of Representatives on February 6, 1998.
(Signed)
(Signed)
ROBERTO P. NAZARENO
HAZEL P. GACUTAN
Secretary
General Secretary of the Senate
House of Representatives
Approved:
FEBRUARY 13, 1998
(Signed)
FIDEL V. RAMOS
President of the Philippine
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