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  1. Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Posts
    1,099
    #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Sir Ed View Post
    Hello. I work for St Luke's and became a member of this site just to reply.
    St Luke's Medical Center Bonifacio Global City is a non-profit corporation wholly owned by St Luke's Medical Center-Quezon City. The latter in turn is a non-stock, non-profit corporation.

    Maybe your parents or grandparents remember this: St. Luke's used to be run by the Episcopal (or Anglican) Church (my mother still refers to it as "the Protestant hospital"). It was established in 1903 by an Episcopal priest, Father Brent--yes, the same Brent as in Brent School. (The Anglicans chose to focus their efforts on parts of the country that weren't yet Christians, namely the Cordilleras and Mindanao, as well as the Chinese; they weren't successful converting the Moros, but were hugely successful up north (that is why Sagada is Anglican) and with many Chinoys--a point I will return to later--as well as Brits and Americans living in the Philippines.

    Anway, when the American Episcopals left and turned over everything to Filipinos, funds dwindled until St. Luke's was on the verge of bankruptcy in the mid-1970s. At that point the Episcopalian church was persuaded by its wealthier parishioners to make it an independent, non-stock, non-profit institution but with services priced in the most financially viable way. (Think of Ateneo de Manila.) From then on it became a stable institution, so stable it's been able to build an ultra-modern facility, St Luke's Global City.

    How can a non-profit become so rich? Because, aside from pricing its services to reflect what they really cost, all revenue is plowed back into the hospital. Its board of directors do not receive a single centavo (sure, they get free coffee and merienda whenever they visit), and its board members include many wealthy Chinoys and Americans who've settled here--who are members of the small Anglican church in the Philippines.

    And, since it's a non-profit, ten percent of its revenue goes to the treatment of indigent patients (in Quezon city). That's a big amount, about 300 M. And indigent patients get the same quality of service as a rich, paying patient.

    By the way, in reference to GMA and FG: in order to recoup some of its investment, SLMC has come up with a naming rights program under which corporations and high-income individuals can have facilities in the hospital named after them. GMA and FG were specifically excluded because of their (ahem) controversial reputations.

    So, to repeat: who owns St Luke's Global City? St Luke's Quezon City. Who owns St. Luke's Quezon City? To be brief: God does.
    ahhh kala ko si St. Luke ang mayari

  2. Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Posts
    2,284
    #12
    OT: * Sir Ed: Baka pwede naman nyo i-tour kami dun sa Presidential suite na P50,000/night.

  3. Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    6,940
    #13
    Quote Originally Posted by Sir Ed View Post
    Hello. I work for St Luke's and became a member of this site just to reply.
    St Luke's Medical Center Bonifacio Global City is a non-profit corporation wholly owned by St Luke's Medical Center-Quezon City. The latter in turn is a non-stock, non-profit corporation.

    Maybe your parents or grandparents remember this: St. Luke's used to be run by the Episcopal (or Anglican) Church (my mother still refers to it as "the Protestant hospital"). It was established in 1903 by an Episcopal priest, Father Brent--yes, the same Brent as in Brent School. (The Anglicans chose to focus their efforts on parts of the country that weren't yet Christians, namely the Cordilleras and Mindanao, as well as the Chinese; they weren't successful converting the Moros, but were hugely successful up north (that is why Sagada is Anglican) and with many Chinoys--a point I will return to later--as well as Brits and Americans living in the Philippines.

    Anway, when the American Episcopals left and turned over everything to Filipinos, funds dwindled until St. Luke's was on the verge of bankruptcy in the mid-1970s. At that point the Episcopalian church was persuaded by its wealthier parishioners to make it an independent, non-stock, non-profit institution but with services priced in the most financially viable way. (Think of Ateneo de Manila.) From then on it became a stable institution, so stable it's been able to build an ultra-modern facility, St Luke's Global City.

    How can a non-profit become so rich? Because, aside from pricing its services to reflect what they really cost, all revenue is plowed back into the hospital. Its board of directors do not receive a single centavo (sure, they get free coffee and merienda whenever they visit), and its board members include many wealthy Chinoys and Americans who've settled here--who are members of the small Anglican church in the Philippines.

    And, since it's a non-profit, ten percent of its revenue goes to the treatment of indigent patients (in Quezon city). That's a big amount, about 300 M. And indigent patients get the same quality of service as a rich, paying patient.

    By the way, in reference to GMA and FG: in order to recoup some of its investment, SLMC has come up with a naming rights program under which corporations and high-income individuals can have facilities in the hospital named after them. GMA and FG were specifically excluded because of their (ahem) controversial reputations.

    So, to repeat: who owns St Luke's Global City? St Luke's Quezon City. Who owns St. Luke's Quezon City? To be brief: God does.

  4. Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    462
    #14
    What sir Ed said is true, i can attest to that.

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St. Luke's Medical Center Fort Bonifacio Global City