Philippine Senate Majority Leader
Juan Miguel Zubiri alleged fraud by several hospitals in 2013, identifying cases that took millions of pesos from Philhealth. The state failed to prosecute doctors, private and public hospitals, and public officials.
AFP Medical Center,
St. Luke's Hospital, Philippine Orthopedic Hospital,
University of Santo Tomas Hospital, East Avenue Medical Center, Cardinal Santos Medical Center,
Medical City, National Kidney and Transplant Institute, and General Santos Doctors Hospital (GSDH) were investigated for health-insurance fraud. In
Iloilo, eye-doctor claims for 2,071 operations in 2006 (amounting to PHP16 million in professional fees) were also investigated. A hospital in
Davao City noted that a janitor who was not a PhilHealth member had been lying in bed to claim benefits as a PhilHealth patient. In 2006, PhilHealth revoked the accreditation of Sara Medical Clinic in
Midsayap for admitting non-existent patients. A
Change.org petition was circulated by a group of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to scrap the agency's directive to increase the mandatory premium to three percent of monthly salaries. The petition referred to PhilHealth Circular 2020-0014 dated April 2, 2020, when OFW salaries were affected by the
COVID-19 pandemic. On July 24, 2020, anti-fraud legal officer Thorrsson Montes Keith resigned due to corruption and irregularities in the agency. His salary and hazard pay had been delayed, and his resignation would be effective August 31. According to presidential spokesman
Harry Roque, the government would investigate alleged overpricing of a proposed IT system costing about . On August 25, 2021, Senator Richard Gordon presented a Senate committee report of its 2019 investigation of alleged fraud and corruption in the state-run health insurer. Video footage in the report included a PhilHealth regional vice president receiving a
lap dance. According to Thorrsson Montes Keith, PhilHealth officials misappropriated at least in overpriced IT projects, "ghost claims", and the misuse of COVID-19 funds. In Senate testimony, Keith compared PhilHealth officials to a "mafia" or "syndicate". The following day, PhilHealth president and CEO Ricardo Morales said that he would resign. PhilHealth Senior Vice President for the Legal Sector Rodolfo del Rosario Jr. also resigned. In September 2023, Philhealth was hacked with Medusa ransomware. Employee and other internal data was breached, with a possibility of member data. The hackers demanded $300,000 (about ). Philhealth refused to pay the ransom, and the hacker group posted the stolen data on the
dark web; data included hospital billing, internal memos, and identification documents. Philhealth said that member data, on a separate
server, was not compromised. The
National Privacy Commission began investigating the true extent of the leak. On August 2, 2024, Senator
Koko Pimentel and a public-health advocacy group filed
certiorari and a
writ of prohibition with a
restraining order to stop the transfer of in PhilHealth funds to the national budget. The petitioners challenged the
constitutionality of
Department of Finance Circular 003-2024. Secretary
Ralph Recto defended the return of unused government subsidies to the national treasury, saying that the circular implements a congressional order under Section XLIII (1)(d) Republic Act No. 11975 (the General Appropriations Act 2024). In 2025, the DOH returned ₱60 billion in surplus funds to PhilHealth to strengthen its universal-healthcare program. ==References==