City of Dreams Manila’s charitable arm, Melco Resorts (Philippines) Foundation Corporation (MRP Foundation), signs a Memorandum of Agreement with Operation Smile Philippines (OSP), an international medical charity, on a P3 million donation towards OSP’s Community Health Assistance Program (CHAP). The donation is undertaken with the support of Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (PAGCOR), the gaming regulator of City of Dreams Manila, a casino licensee operated by Melco Resort Leisure (PHP) Corporation (Melco Leisure).
CHAP, to be implemented in the country’s largest government maternity hospital, Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital (DJFMH), aims to address public health issues affecting Filipino mothers and children, including oral cleft deformity, infant mortality and maternal mortality.
MRP Foundation and Melco Leisure President and Chairman Clarence Chung stated, “In keeping with MRP Foundation’s commitment to implement and fund health programs, we are glad to continue supporting Operation Smile Philippines’ projects to help improve the health of Filipino mothers and children while contributing to the advancement of the government’s efforts to secure a more resilient healthcare system.”
In previous years, Hyatt Regency Manila served as venue for fundraising dinners to sponsor the surgery of children with cleft lip or cleft palate, raising P609,894 and P628,989 in 2018 and 2019 respectively.
OSP Executive Director Emiliano Romano stated, “We thank MRP Foundation and DJFMH for recognizing the importance of CHAP and for extending their support in its implementation. We have high hopes that our partnership would thrive and further broaden to benefit not only the children and mothers in the National Capital Region (NCR) but also those throughout the country.”
Launch of CHAP in Manila
Manila is the pilot site for CHAP. The capital hosts one tenth of the country’s slum dwellers and possesses one of the highest live birth rates among the 16 component cities of the NCR.
CHAP aims to set up the first-ever cleft birth registry at DJFMH and train 150 of the hospital’s and nearby birth centers’ nurses and midwives on lifesaving, emergency situation skills. It also aims to educate at least 6,000 expectant mothers confined in the facility on cleft care and cleft birth risk alleviation.
The program aims to deliver early treatment to children born with cleft lip and cleft palate and enhance the skills of health workers to help reduce maternal and infant mortality.
CHAP’s ultimate goals are to link Manila’s 269 birthing clinics and 895 barangay health centers to DJFMH, adapting Operation Smile Inc.’s hub-and-spoke approach to capacitating health systems in resource-poor countries, and to replicate the program in other parts of the Philippines.