I also paint mb.com.ph - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mb.com.ph Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Manila Water announced that portions of Angono, Rizal and Antipolo City will experience water service interruptions from Monday, Jan. 16 to Wednesday, Jan. 18.
The service interruptions at the Lower and Upper Sakura areas in Barangay Mahabang Parang in Angono, Rizal will start from 10 p.m. on Mond
13 hospitals in Metro Manila reach 100% bed utilization rate for COVID-19 patients—DOH – Manila Bulletin mb.com.ph - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mb.com.ph Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BusinessWorld
May 26, 2021 | 12:03 am
BECAUSE the pandemic made online consultations a necessary innovation, telemedicine has now entered the mainstream. The convenience of booking appointments remotely has reduced barriers such as the need to travel to primary care clinics, thereby allowing patients to consult physicians more often, receive treatments faster, and become more engaged about their health.
Telemedicine report, expects the total number of teleconsultations performed worldwide to reach 765 million in 2025, up from 348 million in 2020, reflecting a compound annual growth rate of 17.1% across the forecast period. The UK-based analyst house indicated that the primary factor driving teleconsultation adoption among providers and patients is the increased efficiency they afford the former, and improved standard of care they provide the latter.
Nardo Samson posing with granddaughter Kiara Bautista, May 2017.
Eighty-year-old Nardo Samson, a retired policeman, lay dying in the back of a makeshift ambulance. It was nearly Easter. A surge in coronavirus cases triggered yet another lockdown in the capital Manila, where a confusing patchwork of quarantines to contain the virus persists.
His family s race to save him is part of a larger tableau of the pandemic in the Philippines. Relatives desperate to save a critically ill loved one are left to fend for themselves as recriminations rise against the government s handling of the public health crisis, which has resulted in over one million cases of COVID-19.