Businessmirror November 04, 2018

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DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

2018 BANTOG DATA MEDIA AWARDS CHAMPION

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business n

Sunday, November 4, 2018 Vol. 14 No. 24

2018 EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

‘YOU MAY HUG THE PATIENT’

RAMON CARRETERO | DREAMSTIME.COM

Govt allots P1 million to Davao public hospital to raise awareness on psoriasis, a little-understood disease, and lighten the lives of sufferers.

T

By Manuel T. Cayon

AGUM CITY, Davao del Norte–It was one of the few times that Nympha, 48, did not slip on her pair of socks when she went to a posh shopping mall at midday of October 26. Her socks were part of her apparel since she’s a teenager, giving her a different sense of momentary freedom as she strolled.

The knee-high socks she constantly wear are not intended to satisfy her aesthetic sense. Neither does she want to make a loud fashion statement. On the contrary, these were her intimate shield from getting bullied or teased, every time she noticed those familiar itchy red spots that appear down at the lower portion of her feet, turning into plaque-like skin on the sides of her ankle. She did not know what the spots were all about during her younger years, and several more years later. But Nympha is definitely bothered by their periodic

appearance, and just disappear by themselves at certain periods. She began to accept these episodes as part of a recurring skin problem. Anyway, Nympha has this sense of security cover. She’s donning her socks to cover the spots, assured that nobody would take notice. It was only about two years ago that she came to know the medical term for that skin predicament: It’s psoriasis. She would soon hear other cases worse than hers, and the red patches that are much exposed in other body parts. A dermatologist she consulted bared that this skin ailment

even made some victims suicidal, most of them, anxious and scared that society would cast them off from the rest of humanity, much like lepers in Biblical times. Nympha, along with some 100 other patients or interested shoppers, watched video presentations of the disease, and listened to doctors’ accounts of how the disease has remained incurable and how proper personal management could contain its episodes. Yet, the bigger intention of the gathering of psoriasis sufferers for a lecture and medical mission in this part of the Davao region is to

amplify the social and psychological need of sufferers to be accepted and not shooed away or avoided. “You can actually hug someone with psoriasis,” Dr. Victoria Patino-Guillano, a derma-pathologist and president of the Psoriasis Foundation, assured. The foundation, in fact, she said, has allotted one activity in one program early this year for a public hug. Even the World Health Organization (WHO) already came out with an official statement categorizing psoriasis as a noncommunicable disease. Continued on A2

Fear of 7: The number that could make China’s currency a trade-war weapon

A

S the United States and China swap threats and mete out increasingly punishing tariffs, the world is watching to see whether Beijing turns to one of its most potent economic weapons. It involves the number 7. China’s currency, the renminbi, has been gradually losing value since mid-April, and on Tuesday it was at its weakest point in a decade. If the currency weakens any further, it could fall below the psychologically important level of

7 renminbi to the dollar. The last time it took more than 7 renminbi to buy a dollar was in May 2008, as the world was slipping into a financial crisis. The Trump administration doesn’t like the idea of a weaker

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 53.6060

Chinese currency. That could give what it considers an unfair advantage to China’s exporters. In the arsenal of trade disputes, currencies can be potent weapons. But China has good reason to keep its currency from weakening, and it appears to have acted in recent weeks to prop it up. Currencies may be potent weapons, but they are blunt ones— and they can boomerang against those who use them. There is nothing particularly threatening about the number 7 itself. The renminbi at 7.002 to the dollar is pretty similar to the currency at 6.998 to the dollar. But passing that number would be significant symbolically. It would suggest China is prepared to let its currency weaken further still. That would give China’s

HTTIN | DREAMSTIME.COM

By Keith Bradsher | New York Times News Service

See “Fear of 7,” A2

n JAPAN 0.4740 n UK 68.1279 n HK 6.8346 n CHINA 7.6937 n SINGAPORE 38.7131 n AUSTRALIA 38.0871 n EU 60.8160 n SAUDI ARABIA 14.2919

Source: BSP (October 31, 2018 )


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