1st year death anniversary - Dr. Tupasi thumbnail

Dr. Tupasi was a respected Infectious Diseases (ID) specialist nationally and internationally. She was a founding member of the Philippine Society for Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (PSMID), and served as President of the 4th Western Pacific Congress on Chemotherapy and ID, and the 25th International Congress of Chemotherapy, both a resounding success in bringing in medical knowledge, skills and expertise from across the globe. Dr. Tupasi taught for many years at the University of the Philippines (UP) College of Medicine, and later served as Director of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM) where she conducted relevant researches in acute respiratory infection. Subsequently, she founded and led the Tropical Disease Foundation (TDF), which undertook numerous landmark projects such as the 1997 and 2007 National TB Prevalence Surveys (NTPS) commissioned by the Department of Health (DOH).

A TB patient herself during medical school, Dr. Tupasi’s personal experience drove her to make TB control her advocacy. Her work in the 1997 NTPS changed the course of Philippine TB history as it steered the DOH to initiate public-private collaboration. Under her leadership, TDF became the world’s first Green Light Committee-endorsed treatment facility for multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB, a pilot project scaled up to today’s nationwide network for programmatic management of drug-resistant TB. This positioned the Philippines as a trailblazing training ground for person-centered MDR-TB care. She is remembered for her passionate leadership in the international TB community as Chair of the Stop TB Working Group for DR-TB convened by the World Health Organization. On the day of her passing, a Minute of Silence was observed during an ongoing international meeting in WHO-Geneva in memory of her life and immense contributions to the people affected by TB.

Dr. Tupasi was instrumental in bringing in much-needed funds to the country not only for TB but also for malaria and HIV. With the rise of HIV complicating TB treatment in the Philippines, she advocated for the provision of free antiretroviral therapy and succeeded, following the concept of universal access to quality treatment.

A recipient of numerous accolades, Dr. Tupasi was one of the Ten Outstanding Women in the Nation's Service (TOWNS) in Medicine (1983). She was a Presidential Awardee as "Outstanding Young Scientist" given by the National Science Development Board (1990), an Outstanding Researcher Awardee of the U.P. Medical Alumni Society Award (1990), a Most Distinguished Fellow of PSMID (1993), Distinguished Researcher of PCP (1993), an Outstanding Health Research Awardee of the Philippine Council of Health Research and Development for the 1997 NTPS (2000), and a Centennial Awardee for Research of the UP College of Medicine (2005). For her lifetime work on TB, she was awarded Honorary Member of the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, given a SIKAT (Strength, Inspiration, Knowledge, Action for TB) Award by the Union - Asia-Pacific Region, and regarded as a luminary in TB care by the Philippine Coalition against Tuberculosis.  

Dr. Tupasi graduated cum laude from the UP Diliman and finished as a Doctor of Medicine with distinction at the UP Philippine General Hospital where she was also trained in Internal Medicine. She was a Rockefeller Research Fellow and had her ID training at the National Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Georgia, the University of Washington, Seattle and the University of Virginia, Charlottesville.

In the course of her career, Dr. Tupasi inspired and mentored generations of ID and public health specialists, nurses, pharmacists, medical technologists, and other health care workers. A special Tribute and a Citation from PSMID were given her a month prior to her demise for her exemplary contributions to the field of ID as a distinguished physician, teacher, researcher and most notably for her efforts toward the control of TB, HIV and malaria. Dr. Tupasi cured and touched the lives of countless patients and their affected loved ones, transforming their devastating journeys with illness into fulfilling and fruitful lives. They are recipients of Dr. Tupasi’s impressive brilliance, genuine care and compassion. They are all her legacy, and her memory remains as a guiding torch. Forever an inspiring role model, she will always be remembered as the unequalled visionary whose dreams turned to life-changing realities that have made the world a better place.

The Tropical Disease Foundation Inc. (TDF) is a private, non-stock, non-profit organization founded in 1984 that seeks to control and prevent the spread of infectious diseases with public health significance through research, training and the provision of timely and relevant service." The Tropical Disease Foundation will continue Dr. Tupasi’s mission towards universal access to healthcare and serve those who are in need.

Message from: Dr. Manuel M. Dayrit

I worked with Thelma for 2 years from 1984 to 1986. She was Director of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM). She had hired me as the head of its Epidemiology Department. In those 2 years, I saw her up close as a scientist and clinical researcher working to understand the patterns of lung infections particularly among children. She was already a “force of nature” then, so driven to set ambitious goals and so determined to achieve them. At the head of a team composed of field workers, lab workers, and clinicians, she set out to answer some of the burning research questions of infectious diseases of the day.

At that time, she was doing research on a variety of lung problems and the various microorganisms that caused what were called “acute respiratory infections”. Her celebrated work on drug-resistant TB was to come a decade later. By that time in 1997 she had long since left government service and was the head of the Tropical Disease Foundation (TDF), a private organization based at the Makati Medical Center.

Driven as she was to excel as a physician, scientist, and health leader, Thelma had qualities which endeared her to her co-workers and subordinates. While tough, she was never arrogant nor condescending. On the contrary, to me she manifested the vulnerability of someone who knew she depended on many others to get results. And good results she did achieve because she evoked the loyalty and good faith of many who had the good sense and good fortune to journey with her on many collaborative undertakings. “Huwag mo akong iwanan” she would often say to a co-worker whose professional companionship, dedication, and hard work she valued.

Thelma was kind-hearted to the very core of her being. I saw this at work when she single-handedly organized a fund-raising concert for a classmate who was imprisoned in the US on charges of trafficking highly regulated drugs. Her classmate who was a practicing psychiatrist needed help to cover her legal fees. Thelma talked her UP friends and colleagues who could sing, dance, or play a musical instrument into performing in that benefit concert. I was one of those who agreed to play a medley of songs on the piano. I remember that concert for all the anxiety it caused me – performing live at PhilAm Life Auditorium. Happily, the concert went very well, I got through my performance without mishap, and the goal of fund-raising was achieved.

On another occasion, I knew that Thelma opened the doors of her home to another classmate who was afflicted with brain cancer. Thelma housed him and his wife through his terminal illness until he passed away.

Thelma’s concern for others went beyond her concern for personal friends. In one sense, this is where her greatness of spirit lay. She fought for the least of our brethren,

many of whom suffered from multi-drug resistant tuberculosis. She lobbied public health authorities, stormed the gates of funding agencies, and held high the research evidence to prove the importance of creating a national program against multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis. Through this initiative she became physician, scientist, health leader, and patriot all rolled into one. It is because of her efforts that many patients with drug-resistant TB, nameless to us, have hope.

And in the face of adversity she was steadfast. She once told me when faced with a setback: “I try not to dwell on it.”

This is the Thelma Tupasi who endeared herself to me and to many, many others whose lives intersected with hers.

I will remember Thelma for the example of her life.

In behalf of my wife Ellerie and I, and all of her friends, we wish to say: “Thelma, we love you!”

Our condolences and prayers for Thelma and her family, Dr. Claver, George, Vil, Gina, and John Paul.

May she forever rest in Our Lord’s peace.

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