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By May Cano, OP
Executive Secretary, Caritas Kalookan, Inc.

January 16, 2021, Caloocan, Philippines – We celebrated Christmas 2020 in a different way in the Philippines. We used to celebrate in a festive, joyful atmosphere. As December approached, we started to decorate our houses and offices for Christmas and to sing Christmas carols.

In my ministry at Caritas Kalookan, Inc. – serving the Diocese of Kalookan, one of the Metro Manila dioceses – I used to plan and prepare Christmas gatherings, especially for our poor brothers and sisters, people with disabilities, the families of victims of extra-judicial killings (EJK), the sick, the aged, vendors, workers, and other groups in need. We sent letters to our friends, benefactors, and relatives abroad and here in the Philippines, asking them to share their blessings with us. We took the time to visit people on the peripheries. 

This Christmas was different. I did not organize a Christmas gathering because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the need to practice social distancing. Still, our Lord sent generous people who shared their blessings with us. They delivered food such as corned beef, spaghetti, packs of noodles and sauce, macaroni and cheese, coffee, rice, and candies, as well as hygiene kits. The Assisi Foundation gave us 500 packs of goods such as fruit cocktail, spaghetti sauce and noodles, macaroni and cheese, and mayonnaise, which we distributed to families who are poor in local parishes. With cash donations, we purchased eggs, rice, and spaghetti noodles and sauce.

Many followers of the live streamed Mass celebrated by Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, DD, Bishop of Kalookan, donated cash into our account or shared their blessings in response to the needs of our brothers and sisters who are poor. His homilies inspired many people to become involved in our mission.

All Sisters in Our Lady of Remedies Mission Chapter were busy in their own ministries, distributing food to people with disabilities, our indigenous Aeta people, drivers, vendors, janitors, senior citizens, homeless people, rural settlers, and other people in need. 

Sister May Cano, OP, watches as boxes of instant noodles are taken out of a truck for distribution to people in need in mission areas of Pampanga, the Philippines.

On December 22, Sister Victoria Changcoco, OP, and I made the two-hour trip to our convent in Pampanga to accept a truckload of 1,445 boxes of instant noodles. I called up the Sisters in the area, who helped distribute them to people in various mission areas. Sisters also distributed food to the poor on December 29.
 
The gift-giving continues in January. The National Secretariat of Social Action (NASSA)-Caritas Filipinas Foundation will distribute 1,600 “bags of blessing” to the poor families whose names Caritas Kalookan submitted. NASSA will also donate vouchers, which families will use to purchase groceries. 

We celebrated Christmas in unique, simple, and unexpected ways, making it more creative and meaningful. Christmas was an opportunity for new experiences and solidarity with a great part of our human family and for a deeper faith. 

It is good to remember and cultivate the following attitudes: 

  • Serve others.

  • Count your blessings.

  • Identify positive ways of coping.

  • Thank God for His boundless mercy and love! 

 
Feature photo: Two young women pick up gifts of food and supplies during a Christmas distribution in the Philippines in December.

By Tracy Carlson

January 12, 2021, Atlanta, Georgia – Two of the nation’s leading health organizations are responding to the dual pandemic of COVID-19 and racial injustice with a 10-year, $100 million partnership to develop and train more Black physicians, helping address the underlying causes of health disparities. 

Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM), a historically Black medical school and one of America’s leading educators of primary care physicians, and CommonSpirit Health, one of the largest U.S. health systems with locations in 21 states from coast to coast, are creating a joint undergraduate and graduate medical education program to educate and train the next generation of culturally competent health clinicians and researchers. 

A nonprofit, Catholic health system, CommonSpirit was created in February 2019 through the alignment of Catholic Health Initiatives and Dignity Health. The system includes St. Rose Dominican Hospitals in Henderson and Las Vegas, Nevada, and Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz, California – both founded by the Adrian Dominican Sisters. 

“As legacy sponsors of Dignity Health and now, as a Participating Congregation with CommonSpirit, we are so proud of CommonSpirit’s partnership with Morehouse,” the General Council of the Adrian Dominican Sisters wrote in a letter to CommonSpirit Health CEO Lloyd Dean. “This initiative promises to have a major impact on positively addressing the critical underlying causes of racial health disparities. Given our growing resolve as Adrian Dominican Sisters to address racial inequities and white privilege, we are grateful to you and CommonSpirit for making this long-term commitment to lay a foundation for patients to have more access to Black clinicians, physicians, and health care providers across the nation.”
 
Morehouse School of Medicine President and Dean Valerie Montgomery Rice, MD, explained that “of the 21,863 students entering medical school in 2019, only 1,626 were Black – and only 619 were Black males. This statistic is alarming for many reasons, not the least of which is the impact on patient care. Studies show that Black patients have better outcomes when treated by Black doctors.” 

MSM and CommonSpirit are uniquely positioned to impact health equity through education and training opportunities and improved access and care delivery. Of the 155 accredited medical schools in the United States, MSM and the other three historically Black medical schools produce the majority of the nation’s Black physicians. 

As one of the largest nonprofit health systems in the nation, CommonSpirit serves some of the most diverse communities in the country and cares for more Medicaid patients than any other health system in the United States. 

The partnership will help develop more Black and other minority physicians by ensuring that a minimum of 300 additional underrepresented providers complete their residency training annually and support a pipeline of students who will be recruited from communities that are historically short on healthcare providers.  

MSM and CommonSpirit will establish five new regional medical school campuses and graduate medical education programs in at least 10 markets in partnership with CommonSpirit healthcare facilities, to be announced in spring 2021.
 
“We are laying the foundation for patients to have more access to Black clinicians and for Black medical students and graduates to gain community-based experience that they need to be successful in their work,” said Lloyd H. Dean, President and CEO of CommonSpirit. “Our initiative also will create a pathway for healthcare organizations across the nation to follow and share our learnings, a vital part of our work.” 

The collaboration will extend to addressing cultural competency and developing research programs to impact illnesses that disproportionately affect minority and underserved communities. 

“We’re immediately leveraging our partnership to address health inequities magnified by the COVID-19 pandemic, as Black Americans are disproportionately impacted by COVID-19,” Dean said. “Together, we will foster a culturally competent system of care that includes testing, care delivery, and vaccine allocation, directed at the most vulnerable populations to reduce the impact of COVID-19 in racial and ethnic communities.” 

MSM and CommonSpirit will contribute $21 million in seed money in the first two years, with a goal of spearheading a 10-year, $100 million initiative that invites the support of individual donors, industry partners, and philanthropic organizations. 

“This partnership is the perfect combination of two healthcare organizations that are devoted to the creation and advancement of heath equity in underserved communities,” Dr. Montgomery Rice said. “Now, more than ever, we believe society needs a unique partnership like ours that can help show the way to reducing health disparities in vulnerable communities, and, in turn, make all communities stronger.” 

Promising their support and prayer for the success of the initiative, the General Council added that the partnership “aligns fully with the Mission and Vision of the Adrian Dominican Sisters. We are delighted, through our participation in CommonSpirit, to be a part of this extraordinary healing initiative.”

Members of the Adrian Dominican Sisters’ General Council are Sisters Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress; Mary Margaret Pachucki, OP, Vicaress and General Councilor; Frances Nadolny, OP, Administrator and General Councilor; Patricia Harvat, OP, General Councilor; and Elise D. García, OP, General Councilor.


 

 

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