Research Institute for Tropical Medicine
The Research Institute for Tropical Medicine is a health research facility based in Muntinlupa, Philippines.
Organization
The Research Institute for Tropical Medicine is headed by a director, and is organized into five divisions - Laboratory Research, Clinical Research, Biologicals Manufacturing, Administration, and Finance.Location
The Research Institute for Tropical Medicine is located in what is now Filinvest City, a central business district in Alabang, Muntinlupa. The site was originally part of the Bureau of Research and Laboratories compound of the Philippines' Ministry of Health. The RITM was incorporated into the new "Filinvest Corporate City" when the latter was established as a business district in 1995.Institute functions
The RITM is tasked by the Philippine Department of Health and the Philippine Government to supervise, plan, and successfully implement research programs to prevent and to control prevailing infectious and tropical diseases in the Philippines. This includes research involving the advancement of vaccines and medications used by medical professionals, such as physicians, nurses, and medical technologists, that they utilize whenever patients they handle are under the diagnosis and treatment of infectious and treatable and curable diseases. The institute also trains medical and health workers in order to be further educated in their fields in relation to the management of tropical infectious diseases. Formulation of plans and research projects involving biological products proposed and currently utilized by the Philippine Department of Health are also covered by the functions of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, including the manufacture of biologic products and vaccines.History
Establishment
1964 Philippine-Japan Joint Commission on Cholera Research
The origins of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine began in 1964 when a Philippine-Japan Joint Commission on Cholera Research was first established during the Diosdado Macapagal administration - the beginning of a cooperation which eventually evolved into the RITM. This cooperation initially began as a tripartite initiative between Japan, the Philippines, and the World bank, and then evolved into a bilateral arrangement between Japan and the Philippines. After the successful conclusion of this engagement, talks about expanding the collaboration between the two countries to cover tropical diseases more broadly began in earnest.1981 JICA grant-in-aid agreement
By the early 1980s, negotiations between "mutually interested parties" within the governments of the Philippines and Japan had been going on for several years, and reached finally reached a breakthrough in 1981 in the form of a grant-in-aid agreement under the Japan International Cooperation Agency.1981 Construction in Alabang
With the help of this Japanese grant, a US$8 million facility was constructed within the Ministry of Health's Bureau of Research and Laboratories compound in Alabang, Muntinlupa.With the construction already well underway, Malacanang then issued Executive Order 674 on March 25, 1981, formally authorizing the Philippine Ministry of Health to establish a research facility to implement a basic and applied research program for tropical medicine in the Philippines, pushing both for health advancement and for medical research.
The facility, which included an 80-bed hospital with an Intensive Care Unit and operating rooms, was inaugurated on April 23, 1981.
Marcos era issues
Throughout the Marcos administration, the RITM was heavily dependent on Japanese government funding for its continued operations with JICA providing about US$1 million from 1981 to 1984, and providing another 3.2 million in equipment in 1985, when the year RITM's experimental animal laboratory was established. By contrast, the administration's budget allocated the RITM an average of about 7 million annually from 1981 to 1985, largely for basic operating expenses and personnel services. The institution was also renamed, having originally been proposed as the "Philippine Japan Research Institute for Tropical Diseases."The institute's output was criticised in underground publications during the martial law regime because its research findings were not being released in the Philippines, and were instead only being submitted to JICA to satisfy grant requirements, given that the majority of the patients it served were research patients, while the Philippine health system had an overwhelming need to meet basic health services.
The institute thus became associated with the administration's supposed "edifice complex" - propaganda projects designed to be impressive showcases of the administration's achievements but whose actual development impact at the time was questionable. Like many edifice complex projects, RITM was located only in Manila, limiting access to it by citizens from elsewhere on the Philippine archipelago.