ILOILO CITY — The Department of Health–Western Visayas Center for Health Development (DOH-WV CHD) detailed its flagship health programs during a media forum on June 16, 2026, revealing expanded services that remove financial barriers and bring care closer to communities. For the real estate sector, these improvements translate directly into more livable, investable neighborhoods.
Zero Balance Billing Removes Financial Barriers
Dr. Carl Andre Diesca reported that the Zero Balance Billing Program has already served over 15,000 vulnerable patients across the region in the first five months of 2026. At Western Visayas Medical Center alone, 11,000 individuals walked out without paying a single peso, while nearly 4,000 more benefited at Don Jose Monfort Medical Center.
When families no longer fear crippling medical debt, their capacity to invest in long-term assets like housing improves. The program effectively shields households from the kind of financial shock that derails mortgage payments and property aspirations. Strong public health coverage is a quiet but critical stabilizer of real estate demand.
BUCAS Centers Bridge Emergency Care Gaps
Christine Mosqueda and Dr. Edene Jamoyot outlined the Bagong Urgent Care and Ambulatory Services (BUCAS) initiative. Three centers are now operational across the region, handling minor surgeries and emergency interventions without requiring inpatient admission. The WVMC facility alone served 8,265 individuals from January to mid-June.
A new BUCAS center in Batad, Iloilo, is now under construction and will become the region’s first off-site facility of its kind. Placing urgent care in geographically isolated areas makes those locations more viable for residential development. Proximity to emergency medical services consistently ranks among top considerations for homebuyers.
PuroKalusugan Reaches Every Doorstep
Senior Health Program Officer John Michael Añes presented the PuroKalusugan program, which embeds health workers directly into barangays. The initiative targets 470,000 marginalized residents across 1,103 underserved communities in Western Visayas this year alone. In the first quarter, 124,431 individuals received checkups, immunizations, and nutrition counseling.
Routine primary care at the purok level creates healthier communities that attract both employers and homebuilders. Barangays with active health programs become more desirable locations for affordable housing projects under the Expanded 4PH Program. The presence of over 23,000 barangay health workers across the region reinforces the safety net that property buyers increasingly value.
Healthcare as a Pillar for Property Value
The DOH’s multipronged approach aligns with Universal Health Care goals and signals that Western Visayas is serious about human development. Investors and developers track such public service expansions closely, as they correlate with rising land values and stronger rental markets.
For property seekers—especially returning OFWs and young families—access to zero-balance billing, urgent care, and doorstep primary services reduces the hidden costs of relocation. Iloilo City’s ongoing infrastructure boom, combined with this health security, positions the region as one of the country’s most attractive real estate destinations beyond Metro Manila.









