Social News 11/10
Project promotes water-electricity
saving in Da Nang
A project to reduce greenhouse emissions by encouraging
the saving of water and electricity was launched at a workshop in the central
city of Da Nang on October 10.
The project is part of the UN’s 10-Year Framework
Programme on Sustainable Lifestyles and Education.
Atsushi Watabe, a research manager at the Institute for
Global Environmental Strategies said environmental protection has helped
develop tourism, trade and services.
The project aims to spread the value of choosing a
sustainable lifestyle.
According to calculations used for the building of
water supply and drainage infrastructure in Vietnam, an urban citizen
consumes an average of 120 litres of water per day. This is set to increase
to 170-190 litres by 2030, while in advanced countries, average water
consumption is falling.
Bui Tho Ninh, head of the Da Nang Water Supply JSC,
said 91.28 percent of households in the city use water daily, with
consumption averaging 136 litres per person per day.
Efficient use of resources at treatment units and households
is important, he added.
Ninh also mentioned measures to save water and
highlighted that a sustainable lifestyle must be taught to children from a
young age.
Truong Sa exhibition tells moving
stories
An exhibition, featuring memories and facts collected
from a journey to Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelago last May, began in Hanoi on
October 10.
On display are more than 70 photos and photo books,
which tell stories of 200 people, of whom 70 are Vietnamese expatriates
across 22 countries and territories.
Entitled “Truong Sa, please come once in your life!”,
the exhibition is part of activities marking the 63rd anniversary of the
capital’s Liberation Day.
It will last until October 20.
Family medicine to be piloted in Phú
Thọ
The Ministry of Health (MoH) collaborated with Phú Thọ
Province Department of Health to hold Yên Lập District Medical Centre’s
Family Medicine Scheme Accession Ceremony and the signing ceremony of the
centre with four central hospitals on Monday.
Family medicine is emerging as the major solution to
health administration at the local level, according to Phạm Lê Tuấn, Deputy
Health Minister. This practice will help improve medical quality and provide
people with better services. With the implementation of family medicine at
Yên Lập District Medical Centre, experienced doctors from central hospitals
will collaborate with local medical staff to enhance chronic disease
prevention and health promotion.
Nguyễn Trọng Khoa, deputy head of the Department of
Medical Examination and Treatment under the MoH, stressed the significance of
family doctors in providing personal, comprehensive and continuing care for
the individual in the context of the family and the community. Family
medicine’s primary care ethics highlight disease prevention and health
promotion based on the knowledge of the patient and his living condition.
“Yên Lập District Medical Centre plans to pilot and implement the family
medicine model at its medical examination department following the holistic
nature of this speciality,” said Khoa.
At the ceremony, the four hospitals including Hà Nội
Heart Hospital, the National Hospital of Acupuncture, the National Hospital
of Endocrine and the National Geriatric Hospital committed to conducting training
sessions for local medical staff, send doctors and nurses to 17 ward medical
centres in Yên Lập District and admit seriously-ill patients when local
facilities are unable to treat them.
Hồ Đức Hải, director of Phú Thọ Province Department of
Health, said that Yên Lập District was implementing the individual health
administration model. The collaboration with central hospitals will create
conditions for local medical staff to increase their management capability in
controlling non-communicable diseases.
The Family Medicine Scheme, after being piloted in Yên
Lập District, will be widely launched in other districts of Phú Thọ Province
in 2017 and 2018, according to Hải.
At present, the first phase of the Family Medicine
Scheme between 2013 and 2020 has been operated in eight provinces and cities
of Việt Nam. It contributes to providing primary and continuing healthcare
for individuals and helps to reduce hospitals’ overcrowding.
On the occasion, MoH also opened a training course of
common diseases based on family medicine values for local medical staff.
Satellite emergency-aid stations in
HCM City save lives
When an emergency aid station received a call last year
about a woman in a life-threatening situation in HCM City, an ambulance was
sent to her home where she was assessed by doctors and later taken to a
hospital.
The 34-year-old woman who was suffering severe pain
caused by a ruptured ectopic pregnancy, was immediately taken to an operating
room, where doctors performed emergency surgery, Dr Hồ Hải Trường Giang, head
of Củ Chi District Hospital, said via email to Việt Nam News.
The emergency aid station, which is located at the
hospital, is one of 25 that exist in the city.
The so-called 115 satellite stations are part of the
HCM City Emergency Aid Centre’s network, whose emergency number is 115.
More recently, a 22-year-old victim of a traffic
accident was saved by doctors at Củ Chi District Hospital when an emergency
aid station’s phone operator received a call from residents who had passed by
and noticed the accident.
An ambulance, doctor and nurse immediately went to the
scene and gave first aid to the victim, who was then taken to the hospital.
The emergency aid station at the hospital, which opened
in October last year, has received 125 people so far, according to Giang.
“The district is large. Putting an emergency aid
station in the hospital is vital so we can rapidly assess patients who need
emergency aid,” he said.
Before the satellite stations opened at local
hospitals, ambulances from the Emergency Aid Centre could not reach Củ Chi
District and other outlying areas quickly, especially during peak traffic
hours.
All five outlying districts now have access to
emergency aid stations, so they can take advantage of the “golden hour”, the
time that may be crucial in saving someone’s life, according to the city’s
Department of Health.
The latest emergency aid station was set up at Hóc Môn
Area General Hospital on October 6 in Hóc Môn District.
Dr Tăng Chí Thượng, deputy head of the city’s Health
Department, said red alerts and the emergency aid stations in the inner city
and outlying hospitals had improved treatment for severely injured accident
victims or patients with serious health problems.
In the red alert procedure, doctors at city- or
central-level hospitals are called to provide technical assistance to doctors
at other hospitals. If patients need more treatment, they will be transferred
to the city or central-level hospitals.
Thượng said the department had asked the Ministry of
Education and Training to issue a code for the professional training of
paramedics similar to what is used in Australia.
Paramedics would provide out-of-hospital treatment by
motorbike, bicycle or speedboat.
The city is studying the use of such vehicles for
out-of-hospital emergency services, according to Thượng.
The city also aims to have an intelligent emergency aid
system that uses advanced IT.
Pregnant women warned to guard
against dengue
The public, especially pregnant women, should take the
initiative to ward off mosquito-borne diseases like dengue and Zika since
current weather conditions in many provinces and cities are ideal for
mosquitoes to breed, health experts said.
Last week HCM City’s Hùng Vương Hospital admitted a
25-year-old woman from the Mekong Delta province of Vĩnh Long who was 38
weeks pregnant and had had fever for nearly two days.
She had signs of sepsis caused by dengue fever and
tests showed that her platelet count had fallen and lungs were inflamed,
doctors said.
They gave her antibiotics but after five-day treatment
her health worsened. The foetal heartbeat was too weak and they decided to
perform a C-section to save mother and child, they said.
Dr Nguyễn Đăng Quang, head of the hospital’s emergency
aid department, said she was given platelets and plasma to prevent
haemorrhages and enable blood to clot.
Now, four days after the surgery last Friday, the woman
and her newborn son have recovered.
But unlike her, a 26-year-old woman in Hà Nội suffered
a miscarriage due to complications caused by dengue fever.
Four weeks pregnant, she had contracted dengue. After
she showed symptoms of the disease for two days she was brought to Bạch Mai
Hospital for treatment, but doctors could not save the foetus.
The hospital’s infectious diseases department reported
that as of mid-August pregnant women accounted for 15-20 per cent of its
dengue patients.
Dr Đỗ Duy Cường, its head, told the Việt Nam Government
portal (chinhphu.vn) that if pregnant women show any symptoms of dengue such
as fever and severe headache they should be admitted to hospital because what
happens subsequently could not be forecast.
At hospitals, they and their unborn child would be
regularly monitored and doctors could find out if they were going to miscarry
or deliver prematurely, he said.
He said people including pregnant women should take
preventive measures such as wearing clothes covering their arms and legs and
sleep inside mosquito nets.
According to the Centre for Disease Control, they
should use mosquito repellents with up to 50% DEET, picaridin, IR3535 or oil
of lemon eucalyptus during pregnancy.
According to Nguyễn Hữu Hưng, deputy head of the HCM
City Department of Health, there is no vaccine yet against dengue and the
best method is to prevent mosquitoes and larvae from breeding by clearing
water containers and keeping the environment clean.
In HCM City alone 16,030 cases of dengue have been
reported this year, an increase of 18 per cent compared to last year,
according to the city Preventive Health Centre.
There have also been 21 Zika patients compared to just
one last year.
Winners of Vietnam Women Award 2017
announced
Eight collectives and ten individuals will be honoured
at the Vietnam Women Awards 2017, recognising the talent, creativity and
contributions of women in all fields of life.
According to Vice President of the Vietnam Women’s
Union Central Committee Nguyen Thi Tuyet, the awards ceremony will be held in
Hanoi on October 17.
The collectives to be honoured include women teams of
the Emergency Department of Cho Ray Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City, the
Hanoi-Amsterdam High School, Thai Hung JSC, and the Women’s Union of Ba Che
district of Quang Ninh province.
The 10 outstanding individuals include Lieutenant
Colonel Bui Thi Ha from the Naval Technical Institute, Do Thuy Ha from Hanoi
Blind Association, Nguyen Thi Hue from a lemon growing cooperative in Can Tho
city, Nguyen Thi Lieu from Duc Tri junior high school, and Nguyen Ngoc Mai, a
worker of Vincem Hoang Thach cement company.
This year, the awards are themed “Women engage in
natural disasters mitigation and seedless climate change response”, aiming to
highlight women’s ideas in the field and to boost awareness of women’s
contributions to the work.
As part of the awards, a Women’s Innovation Day will be
held with various activities, including an exhibition of creative products
made by women, a forum on the role of women in reducing disaster risks and
responding climate change, and an awards ceremony for outstanding products.
On the occasion, the Vietnam Women’s Union will also
present insignia “For the Progress of Vietnamese Women” to Han Mi Young,
President of the World Women Inventors and Entrepreneurs Association.
Since being established 2002, the Vietnam Women Awards
have honoured 69 outstanding teams and 124 individuals.
Two border guards missing in flood
that hit Thanh Hoa province
Two border guards were swept away by flood and went
missing on October 10 when they drove across a spillway of Bon stream in Lang
Chang district, ThanhHoa province, said local officials.
According to Lang Chang district People’s Committee,
the two officials of Yen Khuong Border Post were on the way to help people in
Yen Khuong commune combat the flash floods.
Upon hearing the news, local authorities mobilized 150
soldiers and staff members and more than 200 local people to search for the
two missing border guards.
Ammonia gas leak leaves four
injured, thousands panicked in Saigon
Four people were hospitalized on October 10 in the wake
of an ammonia gas leak that also killed scores of livestock and poultry in
the outskirts of Saigon.
When the accident happened, local spotted white smoke
and an unpleasant smell coming from a gas extraction station on An Phu Tay
Street in Binh Chanh District before seeing many workers running out,
struggling to breathe and even vomiting blood.
The gas killed many plants, pets, livestock and poultry
nearby and prompted a mass evacuation of more than 1,000 students and locals.
According to eyewitnesses, the pipe broke as workers
were extracting the gas from a truck at the station, causing the leak.
The four victims included a passer-by, the truck driver
and two workers. They are now in stable condition.
Halloween party to brighten resort
A Halloween-theme pool party will held in the former
French village’s La Piscine pool area at the mountain resort of Bà Nà Hills
in Đà Nẵng on October 27, offering DJ performances, a street food fair,
talent show and games and outdoor bar.
Organisers said visitors would enjoy a creepy but
fantastic night of electronic dance music 1,471m above sea level from 7pm.
Tourists will also be able to tour a valley of flowers
in the D’Amour garden on the funicular route – the first and the only one of
its kind in Việt Nam – the French colonial style Debay wine cellar, the
temple complex Goddess of the Forest, Linh Ứng Pagoda and the nine-storey
Linh Phong tower with its four-tonne bronze bell tower.
The resort’s third cable car route was listed as 10 of
the world’s most amazing by CNN in 2013.
Cai Lay tollgate resumes fee
collection later this month
Toll collection will resume at the controversial
tollgate in Cai Lay town in the Mekong Delta province of Tien Giang later
this month after the Ministry of Transport and National Highway 1 Tien Giang
Investment Co Ltd last Friday agreed to lower fees there, according to Tien
Phong newspaper.
The new toll range is down from VND35,000-180,000 to
VND25,000-140,000. In specifics, the charge on autos with less than 12 seats
and trucks of less than two tons will be charged VND25,000 per trip, down by
VND10,000, and trucks of more than 18 tons or carrying a 40-foot container
will pay VND140,000 per trip, down from the current VND180,000.
Auto owners who reside in My Thanh Nam, Binh Phu, Phu
An and Phu Nhuan communes in Cai Lay District will be exempt from the road
toll. And those running cargo transport and bus services will get a 50%
reduction.
National Highway 1 Tien Giang Investment Co Ltd built a
12-kilometer National Highway 1 bypass in Cai Lay town and re-asphalted a
26.5-kilometer section of National Highway 1 in the province. But the firm
set up a tollgate on National Highway 1 to collect toll fees from those using
the bypass, so many drivers who did not use the bypass were still forced to
pay the fee, leading to protests which paralyzed traffic on the national
highway.
Drivers reasoned the investor just had the right to
collect fees from vehicles using the new bypass.
Protesting drivers used stacks of banknotes of small
denomination to pay toll fees at the Cai Lay toll station, leading to traffic
congestion in the area. Therefore, the tollgate has halted its operation
since August 15.
PM directs to cope with floods,
ensure safety for dykes
The PM has issued a telegraph asking ministries and
localities to launch urgent measures to cope with floods and ensure safety
for dams.
To limit damage to human lives and assets, the PM has
asked the Central Steering Committee for Natural Disaster Prevention and
Control, Viet Nam National Committee of Search and Rescue, relevant
ministries and agencies and localities to actively realize urgent measures to
cope with floods.
Accordingly, the provincial and city People’s
Committees continue to inspect, review and evacuate local people from
dangerous areas, get access to residential areas isolated due to floods and
take measures to protect dykes and dams.
Localities along the Red River, especially provinces
and cities near the Hoa Binh hydropower plant need to closely follow the
developments in heavy rains and floods as well as the operation of floodgates
of the plant's reservoir and promptly keep local people updated.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
directs functional agencies and localities to launch measures to protect
dykes, safely operate dykes and irrigation projects, reduce damage to
agricultural and aquaculture production, especially activities on the
riverside area of the Red River.
The Ministry of Industry and Trade guides the Electricity
of Viet Nam and management boards of power plants to take measures to ensure
safety for hydroelectric plants.
Yamanashi Prefecture seeks
partnerships in HCM City
Japan’s Yamanashi Prefecture, which hosts popular
tourism sites and diverse agribusiness, wants to connect with potential
partners in Ho Chi Minh City for mutual benefit and development, said
Governor Goto Hitoshi.
The official made the remark at a meeting with Standing
Vice Chairman of the HCM City People’s Committee Le Thanh Liem on October 11.
Agreeing with his guest, Liem suggested both sides join
hands in building specific cooperation programmes in tourism and agriculture
to increase exchanges of tourists and signature commodities between the two
markets.
He briefed the guest on the city’s social-economic
growth and its various deals with different Japanese localities.
Both host and guest shared a hope for stronger
cooperation and exchanges between HCM City and Yamanashi in contribution to
Vietnam – Japan relations.
Yamanashi Prefecture lies in central Japan and is home
to the famous Mount Fuji.
Work starts on modern cancer
hospital in Can Tho
Work started on the construction of a 500-bed cancer
hospital in the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho on October 11.
The groundbreaking ceremony was attended by former
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and Szilveszter Bus, Deputy State Secretary of
Hungary's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
The Can Tho oncology hospital will include four
buildings with a total floor area of 44,575 square metres on Nguyen Van Cu
street, An Binh ward, Ninh Kieu district. The project has a total investment
of 1,727 billion VND (70.5 EUR), of which 56.9 million EUR comes from the
Hungarian government’s official development assistance.
Addressing the event, the Hungarian Deputy State
Secretary said Hungary is willing to provide training and transfer technology
in the field for staff of the hospital, he pledged.
Vo Thanh Thong, Chairman of the municipal People’s
Committee, highlighted the Government’s effort in improving the people’s
health care and protection.
VNN
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Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 10, 2017
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