Ong was born in Manila on October 24, 1963. His father, Ong Yong, was an immigrant from Jinjiang, China who settled in the Philippines in 1922. Better known as Co Tec Tai (許澤台) in the Chinese Filipino community,[3] the elder Ong was an active charity worker who served as president for various civic organizations.[4]
Ong has also authored books. His first publication is the Medicine Blue Book which is often used by Filipino medical students and neophyte doctors. He also wrote the Cardiology Blue Book, which is a guidebook for diagnosis and treatment of heart conditions.[6]
He has also worked as a consultant with the Department of Health from 2010 to 2014.[6] Ong also established the Co Tec Tai Medical Museum in Pasay, named in honor of his father and reportedly the first medical museum in the Philippines.[4] The museum documents the history of healthcare in the Philippines.
Television, radio and journalism
In 2005, Ong became part of RJTV where he produced his own television show.[7] From 2008 to 2018, he made appearances on ABS-CBN's Salamat Dok. He did not have a regular segment on the television show and only participated as a volunteer. He left Salamat Dok in October 2018 to pursue an electoral bid for the Senate in 2019.[8][7] Ong also wrote for The Philippine Star and its sister publications, Pilipino Star Ngayon and PM PangMasa as a columnist.[6]
Ong was also a resident doctor and host at DZRH's public service program Docs on Call from 2009 to 2017.[9]
Social media presence
Ong started maintaining an online presence when he set up a YouTube channel in 2007, where he posts videos providing health tips and medical explainers targeted to a general audience.[8] As of November 2023, his YouTube channel "Doc Willie Ong" has 9.04 million subscribers, and is the 15th most subscribed YouTube channel in the Philippines.[10]
According to Ong, he established his presence in Facebook in 2013 after he confronted an impersonator who created a Facebook page using his name and reposted his medical columns and newspaper articles. The impersonator handed control of the page to the real Ong, and met with him every week to help grow his Facebook presence while Ong continued to write original content for the page.[7] Ong is currently the 10th most followed Filipino personality on Facebook, with 17 million Facebook followers as of November 2023.[11]
Running on the banner of the Lakas–CMD political party, Ong said he did not rely on campaign donations to "avoid being indebted to anyone". Instead he relied on his online presence on Facebook and YouTube where he has 9.7 million followers and 1 million subscribers respectively as of March 2019.[13] His campaign was also backed by 23 other pages with over 800 thousand followers and 28 groups with about 87.6 thousand members in Facebook. According to Ong's wife, some of these presence were managed by Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) who volunteered to support Willie Ong's campaign. Ong was also backed by other social media pages which supported other candidates backed by President Rodrigo Duterte's administration such as Imee Marcos and Bong Go.[8]
Ong also supported the Anakalusugan Party-list's election bid, by featuring for two seconds in an advertisement supporting the organization.[8]
He failed to win one of the 12 contested seats in the Senate, finishing 18th in the polls with 7.5 million votes. According to his wife, they spent around ₱500,000 on his personal campaign. Counting only votes by OFWs, Ong ranked second behind Bato dela Rosa.[8]
2022 vice presidential campaign
Dr. Willie Ong (left) and Manila mayor Isko Moreno filing their certificates of candidacy for vice president and president respectively.
On September 21, 2021, it was announced that he will run for vice president in 2022 as the running mate of Manila mayorIsko Moreno.[15] Ong left Lakas–CMD a day later after his announcement to run for vice president.[16] He joined Moreno's political party, Aksyon Demokratiko, on September 25.[17] On May 9, 2022, Ong lost in his bid to Sara Duterte placing fourth out of nine candidates. Ong conceded to Duterte on May 11.[18]
Personal life
Ong is married to Anna Liza Ramoso, who is also a physician.[1][6] They first met each other in 1992 while Ong was working as an intern at San Juan De Dios Hospital and married a year later.[9] They have two daughters.[6]