ASEAN Community
targets better health care
It is
imperative to focus expressly on improving access to quality health care
within the confines of accelerating socio-economic growth and cultural
progress towards realising the ASEAN Community, said Prime Minister Nguyen
Tan Dung.
Addressing the 12th ASEAN Health Ministers’ Meeting, which opened in Hanoi on September 18, Dung noted since its
establishment in 1967, the development of human capital stock has been a
leading priority for ASEAN.
He applauded the regional bloc’s achievements in
modernising its healthcare sector with the latest in state-of-the-art medical
equipment and infrastructure. He also commended the attention devoted to
improving the training and qualifications of medical personnel.
The Vietnam Government leader emphasised over the past
three decades Vietnam
has made significant achievements in its Doi Moi (Renewal) process.
From a poor underdeveloped war-torn country, Vietnam has transformed itself
into a middle-income economy entering a new period of development,
integrating deeply into the world.
The country has given proper attention to community
health, completing some of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDG),
particularly in lowering malnutrition and mortality rates among children, and
improving maternal health, Dung said.
He highlighted Vietnam’s stead fast efforts in
combating infectious diseases, stamping out epidemics, and setting up local
medical centres. So far, about three quarters of the Vietnamese population
have access to medical insurance and the health index of Vietnam is
higher than in other countries having the same income per capita.
Like other regional countries, Vietnam is
facing numerous difficulties and challenges in protecting and improving
people’s health due to the negative impact of climate change and environmental
pollution, but it will persevere and overcome these obstacles, he said.
PM Dung thanked international friends and foreign
organisations for providing invaluable support and effective cooperation,
specifically those from ASEAN member countries. However, he said, there are
many infectious diseases posing unique and great threats to human health due
to lack of proper treatment.
Accordingly, it is incumbent upon ASEAN to design a
healthcare network to help people, especially those living in remote, mountainous
and vulnerable areas, gain easy access to better medical services.
Closer cooperation among countries is needed to combat
infectious diseases, such as Ebola, H7N9, and Mec-CoVi, dengue fever,
hand-foot-mouth disease, malaria, and rabies.
He also stressed the importance of the ongoing ASEAN
Health Ministers’ Meeting, saying it takes place at a time when ASEAN member
countries are discussing specific measures for regional cooperation
mechanisms in the lead up to the establishment of the ASEAN Community in
2015.
The event, hosted by Vietnam for the first time,
attracted nearly 200 delegates who are health ministers from ASEAN member
countries and officials from China, Japan, and the RoK, as well as the ASEAN
Secretary General and representatives from international organisations.
They focused their discussions on first-aid services,
all-people medical insurance, epidemic prevention and control, and
coordination in combating newly-emerging infectious diseases.
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