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Social
News 14/10
New
diseases need int'l fightback, experts say
More than 100
health, livestock and environment experts from 17 countries are discussing
ways to promote collaboration in disease prevention in the face of several
newly emerging diseases at a three-day workshop that began in Ha Noi
yesterday.
They agreed that
increased collaboration was needed to prevent and fight the spread of
diseases like avian influenza H5N1, H7N9, SARS and Ebola.
"We should mobilise
society as a whole to participate in activities that manage and minimise
disease-causing risks," said Tran Dac Phu, director of the Health
Ministry's Preventive Medicine Department.
Phu called for
greater co-opearation and co-ordination between nations, regions and
continents in handling diseases, saying this was an urgent need in the
context of the rapid spread of Ebola virus and deaths in the
The workshop is
part of the One Health initiative, a multidisciplinary approach to achieve
optimal health for people, animals and the environment through local,
regional and global research collaboration.
Proponents of the
concept believe that the synergism achieved will "advance healthcare for
the 21st century and beyond by accelerating biomedical research discoveries,
enhancing public health efficacy, expeditiously expanding the scientific
knowledge base, and improving medical education and clinical care."
Nguyen Thu Yen of
the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology said that
"Collaboration
in the prevention and control of infectious diseases is largely passive and
happens only at the national level. Awareness and involvement of local
authorities in the prevention and control of zoonosis (diseases that can be
transmitted from animals to human) in most areas remains low and
limited," said Yen.
The workshop will
focus discussions on surveillance and research at the interface between
wildlife, domestic animals and people, as also challenges around anti
microbial resistance.
Participants noted
that the One Health concept has gained much more attention in
With 70 per cent of
emerging diseases being of animal origin, this has become a crucial issue for
the region, given its rapid urbanisation and dramatic expansion of livestock
production, they said.
The HCM City
Department of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs has launched a programme to
build sound and stable industrial relations and protect the rights of all the
stakeholders.
To last until 2020,
it will also help improve managerial capacity, support industrial relations
at State agencies and institutions, strengthen the capacity of trade unions
and union workers, and promote collective bargaining and social dialogue.
Social housing for
workers and incentives related to tax, land, and bank credit will be other
features of the programme, which will be piloted at industrial parks and
export processing zones and in the districts of Thu Duc, Binh Tan, Hoc Mon,
Cu Chi, and 7 until next year.
Technical
hiccups block popular websites
Since yesterday
morning, readers have been unable to access a series of popular news websites
including dantri.com, soha.vn, nguoilaodong.vn, cafef.vn, Vneconomy.vn and
Afamily.com.
Nguyen The Tan,
deputy director general of the Vietnam Communication Corporation (VCCorp),
the sole IT service provider for these sites, denied rumours that the
websites were attacked by hackers. He said the problem was caused by
technical difficulties at VCCorp's data centre.
33 Vung Tau
students suffer food poisoning
Thirty-three
students at
After eating fried
rice and noodles at the school canteen, they experienced fever, nausea,
stomachache, diarrhoea and vertigo and were taken to Ba Ria-Vung Tau
Hospital.
Rare
wildife seen in Ca Mau forest
Several rare wild
animals have recently been discovered in U Minh Ha Forest in the southernmost
The animals
included monkeys, wild boars, weasels, pythons and varans. Wild boars have
not been seen in the forest for dozens of years. The flock of wild boars may
include hundreds of animals, local forest wardens said.
The Ca Mau People's
Committee banned wild animal hunting, transport and trading in 2000. Since
2010, the province has discovered nearly 80 cases of illegal wild animal
trading.
Sick
fishing boat crew member hospitalised
A crew member of a
fishing vessel, who suddenly developed convulsions and became unconscious
last Sunday morning, has been taken to
The 40-year-old
crew member of the fishing vessel DNa 90372 was safely brought to the
mainland ten hours later by the SAR 412 vessel, as directed by the Region 3's
Maritime Search and Rescue Coordination Centre.
The incident
occurred when the fishing vessel was about 100 nautical miles to the north of
Earlier, the centre
had ordered the city's emergency centre to instruct the other crew members
via the maritime communication system on giving first aid to their sick
colleague, after receiving an SOS message from the fishing vessel.
Teaching
English in preschools to be suspended if violations discovered
As per the
municipal Department of Education and Training’s guideline, local governments
have to inspect teaching foreign languages in public and private
kindergartens in
The Department has
just issued an instruction of extra activities in preschools asking to
tighten control over teaching English in public and private kindergartens
with aiming to help children familiarize with English.
Accordingly,
inspectors will stop teaching if they discover preschool managers force
parents and preschoolers to participate in extra-activities. If children don
not take part in english classes as an extra activity, teachers must organize
other activities for them.
HCMC
applies early treatment for HIV patients with ARV
The municipal
People’s Committee has approved a project to treat HIV-infected people with
antiretroviral drug (ARV) earlier by calling for social contribution, Ho Chi
Minh City authorities showed its determination in the fight against the
disease.
The city is
striving not to have any more new HIV-infection cases in next 15 years.
Currently the city
has more than 48,000 HIV-infection cases. As per the Ministry of
Health, HIV-infected patients must have a CD4 count test so that
medical workers can determine their stage of HIV infection and their
readiness for ARV treatment. CD4 cells are a type of white blood cell
that fights infection
HIV-infected
persons is recommended to start free treatment with ARV only when their
CD4 count drops below 350 cells/mm3.
This is in line
with the most recent WHO Treatment Guidelines which increased the eligibility
from under 350 to 500 cells/mm3.
Based on those
criteria, 35 medical clinics for outpatients in hospitals and prisons, and
rehabilitation centers are treating 23,000 HIV people with ARV, accounting
for nearly 48 percent of infection cases.
Accordingly, half
of HIV-infected people without being treated with ARV will be threat of
transmission of the disease.
Currently the
project makers are preparing documents, facilities, ARV supply and trained
medical workers. As scheduled, the project will start next year at four
to five medical units. For the period 2016-2018, the project will be expanded
in districts and wards. All people who do not want to receive free-of-charge
ARV treatment can pay for the treatment.
Scientific study
proves that providing early antiretroviral treatment significantly
improves health among people living with HIV; reduces the risk of
transmitting the virus to HIV-negative sexual partners by 96 percent.
In addition, people
whose HIV is treated with ARV can enjoy an increase in life expectancy
of 40 years
When people living
with HIV register to participate in the project, they will be offered
examination, consultation, periodic medical check-up and tests of immune
conditions and opportunistic infections and medicines.
In reality, the HIV
people taking care and treatment program in the city has helped improving
health among people living with HIV and their living quality.
Pharmaceutical
companies and benefactors will contribute to help HIV-infected people;
accordingly, the price of the medicine in the first phase will be subsidized,
cutting one third of market price. It is estimated that a person living with
HIV will pay VND12,000-22,000 (VND 0.56- 1.03) a day for treatment spending.
From 2016 when
there will be no more support of international sources, patients have to pay
CD4 tests, hence treatment spending will increase to VND14,000-24,000 (US$
0.65- 1.13) a day per person.
Ministry
plans to include literature on medical entrance exam
Minister of Health
Nguyen Thi Kim Tien threw her support behind a proposal to include literature
in the entrance exam for medical universities.
The proposal was
addressed at the meeting of deans of medical universities in
"Even some
state officials use bad grammar while creating documents. I've joked with
them, saying it would be easy to have a stroke reading these documents,"
she said.
According to the
minister, instead of holding a separate entrance exams, medical universities
could use the scores from high school graduation exams to choose students.
Since math, literature and a foreign language are mandatory, medical
universities would only need to choose one more subject such as chemistry or
biology.
Nguyen Minh Thuyet,
former deputy chair of the NA Committee for Culture, Education, Youth and
Children, said better use of language will help doctors in their thinking
processes and to better communicate with their patients. He said,
"Literature can also help doctors be more sympathetic with their
patients."
One teacher of
literature at
Nguyen Duc Hinh,
dean of
Heavy
metals poisoning Dong Nai environment
Heavy metals in the
soil, including lead and zinc, threaten the land environment around
industrial zones in Dong Nai province.
Dong Nai's Centre
for Environmental Monitoring examined soil samples collected from industrial
zones and solid-waste treatment plants in the province.
The centre found
the percentage of underground heavy metals higher than the permitted standard
set by Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources.
It reported that
the content of zinc and lead in wastewater samples collected from Bien Hoa 1
Industrial Zone exceeded safety standards by three to four times.
The content of zinc
in the soil samples collected from Loteco and Long Thanh industrial zone was
reported to be more than double the safe amount.
The percentage of
arsenic and cooper in soil samples drawn from the solid-waste treatment plant
in Thong Nhat's Quang Trung commune were between 1.4 and 4.8 times higher
than allowed.
In addition, the
percentage of arsenic found in soil samples collected from solid-waste
treatment plants at Bien Hoa's Trang Dai commune, Vinh Cuu's Vinh Tan commune
and Dinh Quan's Tuc Trung Commune also surpassed the standard.
However, Dong Nai's
CEM reported that the content of heavy metals in bottom-land, agricultural
and residential areas were still under the permitted standard.
The centre
recommended that farmers improve the quality of land by supplementing it with
potassium and phosphate.
Responding to a
question from Viet Nam News, the director of Dong Nai's Environment and
Natural Resources Department, Le Viet Hung, said that the provincial
government had not been given any information on the issue.
Illegal
miners destroy rivers, fields in Bac Kan
Until the sand ran
out, Illegal mining operations along the
The shocking legacy
is that once-rich riverside paddy fields are now full of vast holes with
bedrock at the bottom.
There were once
numerous sand depots along the river's banks in Khuoi Heo, Tong Neng, Na Pam
and Khuoi Mat wards.
Today in Tong Neng,
an idle sand-mining dredge can be seen sitting in the middle of the river
after denuding the banks of sand deposits, according to Hoang Van Mau, a Tong
Neng local.
Farmers said riverside
fields were once highly fertile, growing corn, potatoes and many other types
of vegetables.
Some farmers, for
short-term profit, rented their rice paddies to sand miners only to receive
barren, wasted land once the sand was removed..
Landslides have been
much more frequent along the river since the illegal miners moved in and
altered the flow of the river.
Mau said his family
and his neighbours lost two rice paddies that were almost ready for harvest.
"Sand trucks
even destroyed parts of the concrete road in the area. The road was degraded
so badly it became unusable when it rained," said Hoang Thi Xuan, a
senior citizen in Khuoi Heo.
Residents filed
many complaints about the environmental damage while the mining was going on,
but nothing was done.
"Local
authorities issued fines and confiscated tools and machines many times, but a
few smaller sites are still operating in secret," said Ha Duc Tuyen,
chairman of the local People's Committee.
Winners in
youth’s creative contest honoured
Authors of 105 winning
projects at the 10th national contest for children’s initiatives were
honoured at a ceremony in
The event saw the
presence of Politburo member and President of the Vietnam Fatherland Front
Nguyen Thien Nhan.
Among 600 models
and products sent to the contest, the organising board selected 105
outstanding initiatives for awards, including five first, 10 second, 30
third, and 60 consolation prizes.
Speaking at the
ceremony, Nhan praised efforts of the organisers, including the Vietnam Union
of Science and Technology Associations (VUSTA), the Ho Chi Minh Communist
Youth Union, the Ministry of Education and Training, the Ministry of Science
and Technology, schools, and parents in creating conditions promoting
children’s creativity during the past decade.
He asked the VUSTA
and the organising board to invite the country’s largest groups and
corporations to attend the contest’s 11th award ceremony, expressing his hope
that all provinces and cities across the country would attend the contest in
2015.
Launched in 2004,
the contest attracted the participation of 40% of provinces and cities with
84% of them having participated in the 10th contest in 2014.
During the past ten
years, winning submissions have been sent to international creative contests
for the youth in
Six female students
competed against each other in the final of Luong Van Can Talent Awards 2014
at HCMC Open University on Tuesday.
After shining in
the presentation and question-answer rounds, student Pham Thi Quynh Hoa from
HCMC University of Economics and Law won the first prize of VND30 million for
her “Loofah - Vietnamese loofah sponge” project.
The second prize,
valued at VND25 million, went to the project “Truc Linh jaggery store” of
Thach Thi Truc Linh from Dong Thap University, and the third prize, valued at
VND20 million, went to Cao Thi Nguyen Nguyen from HCMC University of Foreign
Trade with the project “Nguyen Nguyen noodle cart”.
Three fourth
prizes, worth VND15 million each, were awarded to Dang Ba Anh Thi with
“OPARD.VN – health measurement tool,” Dao Huynh Mai with “The modernized
model of waste collection,” and Trinh Thi Hong Nhung with the project of
“YOCI education center for the community.”
Unfortunately,
there was no winner for the special prize of VND50 million because none of
the ideas presented this year are truly extraordinary as they don’t have a
concrete competitive advantage and technological orientation, shared Le
Truong Tung, chairman of FPT University’s board of directors.
This is the fourth
year of Luong Van Can Talent Awards. It was first held in October 2013 and
attracted 3,853 students from more than 40 universities and colleges
nationwide to take part in the competition. After the contest, prize winners
will be included in the Luong Van Can Talent Club as a place to nurture and
develop their talent.
Some of the most
crucial assessment criteria of each project in the competition are honesty
and business ethics, initiated first by late businessman Luong Van Can, who
is considered the master of Vietnamese businessmen.
As many as 105 disadvantaged
households in eights wards and communes in central
The programme, to
be implemented by the Da Nang Women’s
Additionally, the
Women’s
At the conference,
ISET coordinator in
The first phase of
the project with total investment of more than 7 billion VND (333,300 USD)
was implemented between 2011 and 2014, benefiting a total of 320
disadvantaged households in the city.
It has enabled each
female representative of low-income households to access a loan of 20–30
million VND to construct a shelter using storm resistant techniques.
The coastal city is
one of the first 33 cities to join the Rockefeller Foundation’s global “100
Resilient Cities Challenge” initiative.
The storm resistant
shelter project is part of a range of activities launched in
Result-oriented
poverty reduction policies needed: MoLISA
Provinces and
cities should categorise poor households accurately to ensure all people
living with difficulties will equally benefit from social welfare policies,
Minister of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs (MoLISA) Pham Thi Hai Chuyen
has said.
Chuyen stated that
the MoLISA had circulated a circular guiding the categorization of households
living under or near the poverty line to help with the work.
The document
requests each locality establish a list of households whose poverty status
will be evaluated publicly.
Any locality that
fixes the rate of poor households goes against the regulation, she said,
affirming that its list will be rejected.
In the rest of 2014
and the following year, poor people will continuously be provided with
assistance in loans, jobs and labour export to improve their lives, the
official said.
She went on to say
that the MoLISA is studying new criteria for assessing poverty threshold,
exploring the aspects of income and access to social welfare as well. If they
get the Government’s approval, they will be applied from 2016.
She reiterated
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung’s directions in the Cabinet’s September
meeting that priority will continue to be given to implementing poverty reduction
policies in far-flung and mountainous areas in order to narrow the disparity.
The minister also
stressed the need to pay attention to people who have just escaped from
poverty and those living near the poverty threshold.
Old people
play vital role in disaster mitigation
Hundreds of old
people in the Mekong Delta
Tien Giang is one
of the three localities in the country (together with central Da Nang city
and Thanh Hoa province) selected to celebrate the event, which recognises the
vital role of the elderly in implementing the National Strategy for Natural
Disaster Prevention, Response and Mitigation towards 2020.
The weather now
becomes more and more complicated and unpredictable, particularly in the
He stressed the
need to build policies and a legal framework encouraging the elderly to share
experience in climate change adaptation as they are among the most vulnerable
to natural diasters.
Director of Save
the Children in Japan Ayka Arai underlined the coordination between sectors,
localities and international organisations in raising public awareness of the
issue.
With a coastline of
32km, Tien Giang has always grappled with floods, droughts and seawater
intrusions, according to Vice Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee
Le Van Nghia.
Given the fact, the
provincial authorities have focused on improving infrastructure and building
early warning systems, while including the disaster risk control in the local
socio-economic development plans, he added.
50th
anniversary of Nguyen Van Troi campaign marked in
The Vietnamese
Embassy in
On October 9, 1964,
However, three days
after
To celebrate 50
years since these events took place, activities like photo exhibitions,
documentary film screening, musical performances and poetry recitals were
jointly carried out by the embassy, the Venezuela-Vietnam Parliamentary
Friendship Group, and the Venezuela-Vietnam Friendship Association.
Yul Jabour,
President of the Venezuelan National Assembly’s Permanent Commission on
Foreign Affairs, and representatives from Venezuelan organisations extolled
the Vietnamese people’s traditional patriotism in struggles for the national
independence, referring to Nguyen Van Troi’s sacrifice as a shining example.
The Nguyen Van Troi
campaign was an important event in the Venezuelan people’s armed fight
against imperial intervention in the 60s and also a milestone in the
country’s relationship with
Vietnamese
Ambassador Ngo Tien Dung thanked the Venezuelan people’s support for
Seminar
discusses intellectual property
Vietnamese
businesses have not paid sufficient attention to protecting their
intellectual assets and confidential business information, according to the
Ministry of Science and Technology.
Speaking at a
seminar on "Intellectual Asset Management and Various Management
Tools" held in Ho Chi Minh City on October 10, Deputy Minister Tran Van
Tung said asset protection was essential to maintain business
competitiveness.
The ministry and
other government agencies have organised training programmes to help firms
protect their intellectual property.
As of September,
more than 400 participants have attended the training programme in
However, students
did not have many opportunities to practise, he said.
In a cooperative
programme between the
The training
programmes began this month, serving more than 60 lecturers, researchers and
staff at the university.
Tung said the
ministry would work with other agencies to expand training courses on intellectual
asset management to more areas.
The seminar was
jointly organised by the Vietnam Intellectual Property Research Institute and
National Agency for Southern Affairs under the Ministry of Science and
Technology, and the HCM City Department of Science and Technology.
Meeting
marks Int’l Day for Disaster Reduction
More than 800
people, mostly older people, took part in a meeting to mark the International
Day for Disaster Reduction (IDDR) in southern My Tho City, Tien Giang
province on October 13.
This year, the
Mekong Delta
Bui Quang Huy from the
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD), said since 2005,
abnormal weather and unpredictable natural disasters have badly affected
people’s lives, especially those in coastal, lower course of the Mekong Delta
and mountainous areas.
He hoped that
localities across the country will find specific and feasible solutions for
climate change adaptation in order to ensure safety for the people in
stricken areas.
Ayka Arai, Director
of Save the Children Japan, shared experience that
Le Van Nghia, Vice
Chairman of the Tien Giang provincial People’s Committee, said in addition to
completing infrastructure for social welfare, Tien Giang has paid due
attention to disseminating information to raise people’s awareness on climate
change adaptation, combining disaster management with socio-economic
development, accelerating the application of science and technology in
natural disaster mitigation, and building early warning system.
Efforts
made to realise maritime medicine development strategy
The Vietnam
Association of Maritime Medicine (VAMM) has exerted efforts to realise the
government’s strategy on developing health care system at sea and islands,
said a leader of the association.
It has focused on
conducting researches on maritime medicine and training doctors specialising
in the field, said Prof. Dr. Nguyen Truong Son, VAMM Chairman at a conference
on October 11 in the northern port city of
At the same time,
the association has also given attention to enhancing the capacity of medical
workers aboard vessels, in particular first-aid skills, he noted.
It has also
consulted local governments in coastal localities on how to implement the
medical development strategy and raise public awareness of maritime medicine
to the utmost, he said.
According to Dr.
Pham Le Tuan, Deputy Health Minister, the application of land health care
systems to
Meanwhile, the
capacity of health care stations in maritime areas is still limited and there
is a lack of assets aiding emergency service at sea, he noted.
Dr. Tuan briefed
the participants on the contents and results of the Government’s project 371
on developing maritime health care system till 2020.
The project aims at
stronger State management over maritime medicine, upgraded health care
stations and expanded network of telemedicine centres at hospitals in six
coastal localities.
He urged 28 coastal
cities and provinces to speed up the issuance of health insurance for
fishermen in order to better implement the project.
Safe,
friendly school project launched in Hanoi
The Hanoi
Department of Education and Training in collaboration with the
Non-Governmental Organization Plan in
Principal of Thach
That high school Khuat Dang Khoa said he hopes that the project will help
enhance the active role of teachers and students in the battle against gender
violence in school.
Nguyen Thi Thuy
Linh, on behalf of group of young leaders from Thach That high school, noted
by taking part in an anti gender violence course, her group get a better
understanding about gender violence and know how to solve this issue
toward buiding a friendly, safe and equal school.
On June 12, 2014,
the Hanoi Department of Education and Training signed an agreement with Plan
International in
The project is set
to attract 30,000 students, 45,000 parents and 500 teachers from 20 secondary
and high schools in 16
More young
women choose to be promotion girls
Many young
Vietnamese women have been trading on their looks to become promotion girls
to earn money in a tough economic climate.
Being a promotion
girl entails direct interaction with potential customers, but perhaps more
importantly, dressing up in alluring clothes that feature the label of the product
they are selling. Essentially they rent out their sex appeal to any given
brand; anything from bikinis and skin cream to electronics.
Although
requirements vary, some of the most common are a minimum height of 1m60, a
"good-looking face", attractive figure and no aversion to wearing
skimpy clothes. After sending in their information such as height and weight,
if a girl is chosen she will make no less than VND1 million (USD47.6) per
shift.
Models regularly
have to sit for hours for the application of make-up that is up to the
standards of the employer.
Many girls express
their interest these jobs because of the relatively good pay, with some even
making their phone numbers public so any employer can easily contact them.
Dieu Linh, a
final-year student at a university in
A number of models
who advertise skin and hair products have said that despite the easy money
and handsome income compared to other jobs, they also face risks such as
unexpected reactions to the heavy cosmetics.
Source: VNN/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/ND
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Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 10, 2014
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