BREAKING

Monday, August 11, 2025

A Daughter’s Heartbreaking Fight for Her Father’s Life at East Avenue Medical Center


Wazzup Pilipinas!?




On July 25, 2025, a daughter (Shaira Bugarin) from Caloocan lost her father at East Avenue Medical Center (EAMC) in Quezon City.

What makes her grief even heavier is the belief that his death could have been prevented — if only the public hospital system had worked the way it should.


She shared her ordeal in an emotional online post that has since resonated with thousands of readers, particularly those who rely on public hospitals because private healthcare is financially out of reach.

Her account paints a disturbing picture — not just of her father’s final days, but of a healthcare system under strain, where miscommunication, procedural delays, and lack of coordination can turn treatable cases into tragedies.


The First Signs: Hope and the Search for Surgery

In April, her father was diagnosed with a brain tumor accompanied by bleeding. Their doctors advised immediate surgery and recommended transferring to a larger hospital — either the Philippine General Hospital (PGH) or EAMC — that could perform the procedure.


Because EAMC was closer to their home in Caloocan, the family chose it. Looking back, she calls this “the most regretful decision” she has ever made.


Her complaint was not about the age of the doctors but about what she described as their lack of responsiveness and coordination.

One key figure, she claimed, only visited the ward about every five days and told the family to “wait for rounds” whenever they sought updates.


In those first two months, her father — who had been strong and able to walk when first admitted — never underwent surgery. Instead, the family was eventually told to discharge him to undergo an MRS (Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy) procedure at another hospital before surgery could proceed.

By then, she said, he had developed Type 2 diabetes, allegedly from prolonged use of dexamethasone, a steroid given to reduce brain swelling.


July 20: A Sudden Turn for the Worse

On July 20, her father developed fever, stomach pain, and difficulty breathing. Although he wanted to wait for their PGH schedule on July 23, the daughter rushed him back to EAMC, thinking his original medical teams could now act faster — especially since they had already prepared funds for the MRS.


Instead, he was admitted to the Internal Medicine ward and later transferred to the ICU. Doctors recommended intubation to ease his breathing and prevent heart failure, saying he had hospital-acquired pneumonia.


It was here that the family’s frustration deepened.

She alleged that her father’s condition was not consistently monitored, that the family had to repeatedly chase staff for updates, and that referrals — such as to gastroenterology after he began passing blood — were never actually made.


The Blood Transfusion Delay

The most critical delay, she said, came when her father’s hemoglobin levels dropped dangerously low.

Although doctors confirmed the need for an urgent blood transfusion on the night of July 23, it was not administered until nearly 12 hours later.


In that time, she said, she begged nurses, doctors, and the blood bank for action, only to be told she was being “too persistent” and reminded that they could not “do magic” in finding matching blood.


While the transfusion briefly improved his heart rate and responsiveness, it was too late.

Multiple failed attempts at blood extraction the next day delayed a second transfusion. Her father died on July 25 — before it could happen.


Cause of Death: Severe Sepsis

The death certificate listed severe sepsis as the cause of death.

Infections like sepsis are often fatal for patients with weakened immune systems, such as those battling brain tumors, and require immediate detection and treatment.

In her account, the daughter claims her father contracted pneumonia and suffered gastrointestinal bleeding while under hospital care — developments she believes could have been prevented or treated more aggressively.


One Good Doctor Amid the Pain

She singled out one physician — Dr. Pantig of Endocrinology — for praise, describing him as “exceptional” for his attentiveness and compassion.

But she said such dedication was the exception, not the rule.


A Larger Systemic Problem

Her story is not unique.

Public hospitals like EAMC and PGH serve thousands of patients daily, with limited staff, outdated facilities, and chronic budget shortages.

Even skilled medical professionals are stretched thin, leading to procedural bottlenecks, poor communication, and avoidable delays.


Healthcare experts point to several urgent reforms:


Increased funding for staffing, modern equipment, and essential medicines


Streamlined patient referral and procedure systems to eliminate deadly delays


Better infection control and emergency protocols


Improved doctor–patient communication so families understand the medical situation in real time


Her Final Words: A Warning to Others

The woman ends her account with a bitter truth:


“I know this post won’t bring my father’s life back, but I hope it will remind everyone to be careful when choosing a hospital. Don’t wait for a code blue before your patient is attended to.”


Her grief has now become part of a larger public conversation about the urgent need for healthcare reform in the Philippines — a conversation that will continue until lives like her father’s stop being lost to systemic neglect.

AI’s Jobmanship Crisis: The Wave That’s Redefining Work—And Who’s Drowning


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This is no idle rumor—AI isn’t coming; it has landed, and it's reshaping lives and livelihoods with an unforgiving speed.


The Numbers Are Staggering

According to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, in July alone, the surge in generative AI adoption by private employers cost over 10,000 jobs. Year-to-date, that number has already surpassed 27,000 layoffs directly linked to AI since 2023. The broader private sector is bleeding too—806,000 job cuts from January to July, the highest since 2020. And in tech? A staggering 89,000 roles slashed, a 36% year-over-year increase.



Jobs growth, meanwhile, is sputtering: July saw a paltry 73,000 new jobs added, well below expert expectations.



Warnings From the Top

Business leaders are increasingly blunt. Ford’s CEO warns that up to half of all white-collar jobs could vanish to AI. JPMorgan Chase expects a 10% workforce reduction in its consumer unit alone.


 Anthropic’s Dario Amodei paints an even grimmer picture: 50% of entry-level white-collar roles could disappear within five years, sending unemployment soaring toward 20%.


Young Talent at Greatest Risk

Goldman Sachs flags Gen Z tech workers—those in junior roles—as first in line for displacement. Tech employment among 20–30-year-olds already shows an alarming 3-percentage point jump in unemployment, more than four times the national rise.


Beyond Panic: What Industry and Academia See

Even traditional strongholds aren’t immune. Major players like Microsoft, Intel, and BT are shedding jobs tied to AI optimization, even as productivity remains strong.


 IBM and CrowdStrike are replacing HR roles with AI, even while reinvesting in programming and sales.



Yet a deeper dive reveals nuance. A recent economic analysis shows workers most exposed to AI—often the highly educated—fare slightly better in the labor market than less exposed peers.



Academic research underscores this complexity: while AI may supplant certain jobs, it amplifies demand for complementary skills like digital literacy, teamwork, and resilience—boosting wages for those who possess them.



What Lies Ahead?

Experts warn of an AI-fueled downturn, where companies accelerate automation to weather recessions—a trend poised to expand unemployment in non-routine cognitive jobs. U.S. Fed officials acknowledge AI’s potential to reshape foundational labor metrics.



Still, skepticism remains. White House AI adviser David Sacks calls the doomsday narrative overhyped, arguing the real threat isn’t AI replacing us, but those among us who wield it skillfully.



The Verdict: Reality Meets Opportunity

This isn’t a story of jobs vanishing without warning—it’s a story of disruption, adaptation, and those who can seize the shift.


Entry-level and junior roles are under siege.


Gen Z and tech newcomers are particularly vulnerable.


But AI isn’t the enemy—ill-preparedness is. As one expert puts it: “AI will not replace you… but someone using AI will.”


In this era, your diploma is no longer a shield—AI literacy is your survival gear.


So the real question is: will you let AI crush your career, or will you ride its wave to unprecedented success?

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Why We Speak in Many Tongues — And Why It Matters


Wazzup Pilipinas!?



Some may ask, almost skeptically: “Why bother?”

Why spend the time and effort to create content in Filipino, in Taglish, or in the many other languages of the Philippines when we can simply use English and call it a day?


The answer is both simple and profound: because we are Filipinos. Even in a nation where English flows easily in conversations, meetings, and social media posts, it is our native tongues that carry the heartbeat of who we are.


August — National Language Month — is a reminder that our words are more than just a tool for communication. They are vessels of identity, culture, and history. By producing content in Filipino and in other Philippine languages, we’re not merely translating words; we’re bridging worlds.


We want our messages — especially those that address vital issues — to reach more people, in the language that resonates with their everyday lives. This is not just about wider reach. It’s about empowering communities, making them more confident to speak up, advocate for their rights, and shape their own futures.


In doing this, we also contribute to the living, breathing evolution of the Filipino language. It is a language born of many tongues — at least eight major and over a hundred others — and continues to grow richer as it absorbs the colors, rhythms, and cadences of each.


And while Filipino may have begun with the grammatical structure of Tagalog, it has never been exclusive to it. Every time we speak it, we infuse it with pieces of our own mother tongues. It becomes a shared space where Bicolanos, Ilocanos, Kapampangans, Warays, Cebuanos, Tausugs, and countless others can meet and understand each other.


So why are we “bothering”?

Because language is not just how we talk — it’s how we connect, remember, and move forward together.


TAGALOG VERSION

Bakit Tayo Nagsasalita sa Maraming Wika — At Bakit Ito Mahalaga

May magtatanong, may halong pagtataka: “Bakit pa?”

Bakit pa gugugol ng oras at pagod para gumawa ng content sa Filipino, sa Taglish, o sa iba’t ibang wika sa Pilipinas kung puwede namang diretsong mag-English at tapos na?


Ang sagot ay parehong simple at malalim: dahil tayo ay mga Pilipino. Kahit sanay tayong gumamit ng Ingles sa usapan, sa opisina, at sa social media, ang mga sariling wika natin ang tunay na tumitibok bilang puso ng ating pagkatao.


Ang Agosto — Buwan ng Wika — ay paalala na ang ating mga salita ay higit pa sa paraan ng pakikipag-usap. Ang mga ito ay sisidlan ng ating pagkakakilanlan, kultura, at kasaysayan. Sa paggawa ng content sa Filipino at iba pang wika ng Pilipinas, hindi lang tayo basta nagsasalin ng salita — nag-uugnay tayo ng mga mundo.


Nais naming maabot ang mas maraming tao, lalo na pagdating sa mga isyung mahalaga, gamit ang wikang mas malapit sa kanilang araw-araw na buhay. Hindi lang ito tungkol sa lawak ng abot. Ito ay tungkol sa pagbibigay ng lakas sa mga komunidad, para mas maging matatag at handang ipaglaban ang kanilang karapatan at kinabukasan.


Sa ganitong paraan, nakikibahagi rin tayo sa patuloy na pagyabong ng wikang Filipino — isang wikang isinilang mula sa samu’t saring wika sa bansa, may hindi bababa sa walong pangunahing wika at mahigit isang daang iba pa.


At kahit nagsimula ito sa estruktura ng Tagalog, hindi ito eksklusibo rito. Sa bawat gamit natin ng Filipino, dinadagdagan natin ito ng piraso ng ating sariling wikang kinagisnan. Nagiging isa itong bukas na espasyo kung saan maaaring magtagpo at magkaintindihan ang mga Bicolano, Ilocano, Kapampangan, Waray, Cebuano, Tausug, at marami pang iba.


Kaya bakit nga ba tayo “nababahala” na gawin ito?

Dahil ang wika ay hindi lang paraan ng pagsasalita — ito ay tulay ng pagkakaugnay, alaala, at sama-samang pag-usad.

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