Simpol Beyond The Spotlight: Chef Tatung’s Long Game

Chef Tatung steps back from the spotlight, allowing Simpol to evolve into a collaborative ecosystem built on shared voices, deeper trust, and long-term sustainability beyond a single personality.

Unilever Philippines And General Trias City Government Sign Partnership To Strengthen Community Livelihoods

Unilever Philippines partners with City Government of General Trias to launch GentriAsenso, creating new livelihood opportunities for local communities.

When Algorithms Became Gatekeepers Of Reputation

Algorithmic systems reward consistency and credibility, reinforcing organizations that maintain clear, stable, and trustworthy digital footprints.

How Simpol Became Part Of The Filipino Table

Simpol evolves from simple recipes into shared family traditions, showing how food becomes part of everyday Filipino life and memory through meaningful, accessible cooking guidance.

150 Apayao High School Students Trained As Mental Health Peer Responders

Through dedicated training, 150 high school students in Apayao are now valuable resources in addressing mental health concerns among their peers.

150 Apayao High School Students Trained As Mental Health Peer Responders

1347
1347

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The Apayao Provincial Health Office has strengthened its mental health response program by training 150 high school students to serve as peer support responders for fellow learners experiencing mental health issues.

Loremia Pareja of the Apayao provincial government information office, said the student-responders came from four secondary schools: Apayao National Agro-Industrial High School in Calanasan, Conner Central National High School, Sipa-Imelda National High School in Sta. Marcela, and Bacda National High School in Luna.

“A total of 150 students from four secondary schools in the province have stepped up to serve as mental health peer supporters who will respond to peers suffering from mental health issues,” Pareja said in an interview on Thursday.

The students underwent a five-day training under the Mental Health and Psychosocial Support Program (MHPSS) initiated by the Provincial Health Office.

The training included real-life scenarios, role-playing exercises, and open discussions to prepare them as frontliners in providing basic peer intervention and emotional first response.

“These peer supporters will be the first line of assistance for classmates dealing with stress, anxiety, or personal difficulties,” Pareja noted.

The initiative is part of Apayao’s efforts to expand access to mental health support among youth by implementing school-based, peer-led programs. (PNA)