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Showing posts with label Asean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asean. Show all posts

ASEAN health officials adopt Hanoi joint declaration on traditional medicine

English.news.cn 2010-11-02

HANOI, Nov. 2 (Xinhua) -- The second Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Traditional Medicine conference closed here Tuesday, passing the seven-point Hanoi joint declaration.

The three-day conference was held under the theme of "Bringing Traditional Medicine to the National Healthcare System Towards a Feasible Model for ASEAN Countries," drawing ASEAN Secretary- General Surin Pitsuwan and more than 200 representatives from ASEAN countries, Japan, China, the Republic of Korea, India and international medical organizations.

In the closing ceremony, Vietnamese Minister of Health Nguyen Quocs Trieu said ASEAN countries were urged to build action plans and mechanisms for boosting cooperation in traditional medicine.

Representatives held fruitful discussions to share experience in attaching traditional medicine to the national healthcare systems and preserving rich resources of medicines in ASEAN countries to take better care of people, said Trieu.

The Hanoi Joint declaration will provide criteria for ASEAN countries to carry out and assess the implementation of cooperation in traditional medicine among countries, according to Trieu.

On the sidelines of the conference, an exhibition on achievements of traditional medicine of some ASEAN countries was held, showcasing posters and documents on traditional medicine.

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Bali to host Asia-Pacific conference on disaster mitigation

Antara News, Monday, September 6, 2010 13:53 WIB

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Bali is to host an Asia-Pacific Association on Emergency and Disaster Medicine (APCEDM) Conference in 2010, the organization`s chairman Dr Abdul Rajak said here on Monday.

"Of the two other candidates, namely Banda Aceh and Jakarta, the organization`s board of directors choose Bali," he said adding that he could not yet mention the exact date of the conference.

Rajak added the conference would consist of a three-day seminar and one-day simulation to test disaster management at district, province, national and international levels.

Though the conference would mainly focus on post-disaster medical and health care , Rajak said, the coordinating committee would still involve the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) in planning the conference.

The Asia-Pacific region is among the most disaster-prone parts of the world. Disasters hitting this region are mostly landslides, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and tsunami.

This condition has made governments in the region more and more aware of the need to unite in facing natural disasters.

Last year, the military chiefs of 24 Asia-Pacific countries agreed to enhance cooperation in tackling the effects of natural disasters and epidemic diseases, an Indonesian military official said.

The agreement was reached at the 12th Chiefs of Defense (CHOD) Conference in Hawaii, United States, last October 26-29, 2009, Indonesian National Defense Forces (TNI) Chief Gen Djoko Santoso said.

"Several issues were discussed in the forum, including post-disaster management and ways to tackle epidemic diseases," Djoko said, adding that the three-day meeting also agreed to improve cooperation in anti-piracy operations.

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Poor access to healthcare still a major problem in RI

Dina Indrasafitri, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 05/22/2010 10:07 AM

Problems with accessible and affordable healthcare are common in Indonesia and most ASEAN countries, but there are solutions, says lawmaker Nova Riyanti Yusuf.

The problem of accessibility could be solved with the provision of an insurance system that would help people access healthcare, she said.

Kevin Haydon, the CEO of global sales and service at Philips Healthcare, said that while there was growing awareness about the urgent need for healthcare among countries in the ASEAN region, this tendency also produced the challenge of growing demand.

Despite the general problem of increasing demand for quality healthcare, there are also specific problems experienced by ASEAN countries, which have different financial structures or market characteristics.

“In the case of developed economies, the biggest health challenges are chronic diseases and the fact that the population is living longer. As you get older, you end up with more chronic diseases such as diabetes and cancer, which are typically more expensive to manage,” Haydon said.

While countries with developed economies strive for ways to ensure that better quality healthcare is still affordable, those with emerging markets are still struggling with basic issues of access.

“In many emerging economies, despite increasing affluence, urbanization and improved healthcare, there is still a serious challenge of ensuring access to healthcare — especially for the millions of urban and rural poor,” Haydon said in his speech during the event.

Nova said there had not been any moves for direct cooperation between Indonesia or any other ASEAN countries, such as Thailand and the Philippines.

The Indonesian government is currently drafting a bill on a social insurance management agency. The bill is expected to provide a legal basis for an agency that will manage the national security system, in which all Indonesians will have primary healthcare insurance.

Earlier this week, lawmaker, Surya Chandra Surapaty, said the House of Representatives was hoping to submit the draft to the President on June 16.

Nova said that should the country manage to pass the bill this year, it might establish itself as a model for other countries in the region.

However, she added that some suggestions revealed the hope in establishing a universal healthcare system in which the rich helped the poor and the well helped the ill was “very ambitious”.

“We [legislators] are discussing whether this bill will be feasible,” she said.

Nova raised several issues, such as whether the state should also cover secondary or tertiary healthcare and whether the state should apply taxes to ensure feasibility.

“Thailand mentioned that at first the system of paying 30 baht granted primary health care, but then [the problem] spread further into the secondary and tertiary. Nowadays, there are many diseases related to lifestyle and climate change,” she said.

On a more optimistic note, Nova said that she would propose including mental illnesses in the draft of the new bill.

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Asia-Pacific MDG progress under threat from global economic crisis

Asian Development Bank

ESCAP, ADB and UNDP joint Report calls for strengthening social protection

MANILA (UN ESCAP Information Services) – A joint report by the United Nations and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) warns that the global economic crisis could trap an additional 21 million people in the Asia-Pacific region in extreme poverty, living on less than $1.25 a day.

Achieving the Millennium Development Goals in an Era of Global Uncertainty: Asia-Pacific Regional Report 2009/10, launched today in Manila, examines the toll that the global economic crisis has taken on progress towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in the Asia-Pacific region. Produced by United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), ADB and the UN Development Programme (UNDP), the report identifies opportunities for action – showing how countries of Asia and the Pacific can better protect themselves from this and future crises.

“This report shows that, while we are at a moment of crisis for the MDGs we also have an opportunity,” says Noeleen Heyzer, UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ESCAP at the report launch. “As this crisis has exposed many vulnerabilities in the region – we can now address them and direct this recovery towards a stronger sustainable development path for the Asia-Pacific region.”

"Most stimulus measures have focused on areas other than social expenditures," says Ursula Schaefer-Preuss, ADB Vice President. "If we are to address the human impacts of the economic slowdown and achieve the MDGs, then social spending needs to be stepped up substantially."

"Asia has much weaker social protection compared to other regions such as Latin America and Eastern Europe,” says Ajay Chhibber, UNDP Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific and UN Assistant Secretary-General. “Without better protection people fall back into poverty with economic crisis, health pandemics and natural disasters and cannot recover easily, making the achievement of MDGs more difficult."

The report notes that long-term social protection can actually strengthen Asia’s resilience against future shocks. Yet the report finds that across the region, only 20 per cent of the unemployed and underemployed have access to labour market programmes such as unemployment benefits, and only 30 per cent of older people receive pensions.

If fiscal stimulus packages have a strong component of social expenditures, notes the report, this is likely to produce a double dividend – not only boosting growth more rapidly but also accelerating progress towards the MDGs.

Prior to the economic crisis, the region as a whole had been making notable gains, including being on track to achieve three important targets: gender parity in secondary education, ensuring universal access of children to primary school, and halving the proportion of people living below the $1.25-a-day poverty line. However, the economic crisis undermined the momentum.

Asia and the Pacific is still the home to the largest number – more than 50 per cent – of people, both rural and urban, without basic sanitation, of under-5 children who are underweight, of people infected with TB, of people living on less than $1.25 a day, and of rural people without access to clean water, according to the report.

It notes that in 2009 the crisis trapped up to an additional 17 million people in extreme poverty, and in 2010, another 4 million, giving a total of 21 million or roughly the equivalent to the population of Australia.

The most adversely affected segment of the population is women, who constitute the majority of Asia’s low-skilled, low-salaried, and temporary workforce that can easily be laid off during economic downturns. Moreover the crisis has reduced the demand for migrant labour – and women form nearly two-thirds of the total Asian migrant population.

The report points to opportunities for the region to protect itself and the MDG progress from future crisis though regional cooperation. Regional cooperation would also be particularly valuable for the trade in food, and could include grain banks that are maintained in each country but readily accessible to others, notes the report.

Expanding Asian monetary and financial coordination would be particularly useful to reduce external shocks such as with the global financial crisis. While fiscal stimulus is the most practical way of filling the gap left by declining exports, in the medium and long term, countries will need to generate domestic demand in a more sustainable way.

Countries can consider diversifying their export markets to become less dependent on demand in the West, suggests the report. They can boost trade within the region by liberalizing trade regimes and improving transport links, simplifying customs and inspection procedures.

By lowering trade barriers and creating more opportunity for the Asia-Pacific region to invest within itself, there can be a greater insulation against such crisis in the future.

Achieving the Millennium Development Goals in an Era of Global Uncertainty: Asia-Pacific Regional Report 2009/10 is the fourth regional MDG report for Asia and the Pacific produced by the three agencies.

For more information please go to: http://www.mdgasiapacific.org/.


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Candidates sought for ASEAN child commission

The Jakarta Post, Sat, 02/06/2010 1:00 PM

JAKARTA: The government is looking for candidates to be selected as Indonesia's commissioners to the ASEAN Commission on the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Women and Children.

"The 8th meeting of ASEAN's committee on women agreed that member countries must submit the names of their representatives by March 15 at the latest," Sri Danti Anwar, the head of the selection committee from the Women's Empowerment and Child Protection Ministry, was quoted as saying by Antara news agency.

Each country has to appoint two commissioners. Anwar said the selection process, which will also involve other ministries, including the Foreign Ministry, will be transparent. Candidates should have experience with issues facing women and children at the regional and international levels.

"They also should have moral integrity and wide networking," she said. The deadline for applications is Feb. 19. - JP


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