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List of application form & formats for Government Officials, Nepal
NoticeForm FormatsMiscellaneousNational Plan, Policy & GuidelinesResearch & Publication

List of application form & formats for Government Officials, Nepal

by Public Health Update December 22, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Here are the list of application form & formats for Government Officials, Nepal especially targeted for health service officials.

का स मु फाराम (Officer and Assistant) 

List of application form & formats for Government Officials, Nepal

  • निवृत्तभरण माग फाराम (Pension Form) 

  • सपथ ग्रहण (Sapat Grahan)

  • New PF Number Request Form

  • Starbriddi_ स्तरवृद्दि फाराम .pdf

  • का स मु फाराम (Officer and Assistant) 

  • Sapat Grahan सपथग्रहण

  • BIDA NIBEDAN, BIDA SWIKRITI AND AUSHADHI UPCHAR KARCHA BIBARAN (विदा फाराम विदा स्विकृती फाराम)

  • RAMANA PATRA (रमना पत्र)

  • निरोगिता तथा सपथ ग्रहण (स्वास्थ्य सेवा बाहेक अन्य सेवाका लागि)

  • निरोगिता तथा सपथ ग्रहण (स्वास्थ्य सेवाका लागि)

  • सनाखत ढाँचा

  • स्थायी नियुक्ति भएको ६० दिन पश्चात् सिटरोल दर्ता गर्न आउने कर्मचारीले पेश गर्नुपर्ने सनाखतको ढाँचा

  • सिटरोल फारम (अनुसूची १०) स्वास्थ्य सेवाका लागि

  • सिटरोल फारम (अनुसूची ७)

  • २ वर्षभन्दा वढी सेवा अवधिपूरा गरिसकेका कर्मचारीले प्रमाणित गराई पेश गर्नु पर्ने फारम

  • एन्ड्रोइड मोवाइल एप सम्बन्धी जानकारी

Citizen Investment Trust

  • 80% ऋण सापटी लिने फारम

  • अवकाश कोषकट्टी रकम फिर्ता लिने बारे कार्यालयले लेख्ने पत्रको ढाँचा

  • ऐच्छिक अवकाश कोष रकम फिर्ता लिने फारम

  • मन्जुरीनामाको ढाँचा

  • छुट-रकम-फिर्ता-लिने-फारम

  • नागरिक-एकांक-दरखास्त-फाराम

  • कोषकट्टी रकम जम्मा गर्ने फाँटवारी नमूना

Karmachari Sanchaya Kosh

  • मुनाफा रकम जम्मा गर्ने सम्बन्धी फाराम
  • EMPLOYEES PROVIDENT FUND Medical Treatment Reimbursement Claim Form
  • Full Payment Form (भुक्तानी आवेदन फारम)
  • A/C Integration Form (कोषकट्टी रकम एकीकरण फारम)
  • कोषकट्टी फाँटवारी फारम
  • कोषबाट रकम भुक्तानी लिनको लागि मञ्जुरीनामा फारम
  • KYC विवरण (व्यक्तिगत)
  • Special Loan Form (विशेष सापटी आवेदन फारम)
  • Loan Installment Form (सापटी कट्टी फाँटवारी)
  • Welfare Claim Form (कल्याणकारी आवेदन फारम)
  • Funeral Grant Form (काज किरिया फारम)
  • Accident Compensation Form (दुर्घटना क्षतिपूर्ती फारम)
  • Medical Expenses Form (अौषधोपचार खर्च फारम)
  • Maternity and child care Form (सुत्केरी तथा शिशु हेरचाह फारम)
  • E Services Application Form Individual (E-Service आवेदन फारम – व्यक्तिगत)
  • E Services Application Form Offices (E-Service आवेदन फारम – कार्यालयको लागि)
  • MPhil PhD Application Form (MPhil PhD आवेदन फारम)

CIVIL SERVICE HOSPITAL

  • MASTER HEALTH CHECK UP (MHC) PACKAGES AND PRICE LIST
  • SERVICE PRICE LIST-PDF

HMIS

  • Will update soon.

TRAVEL ORDER 

  • भ्रमण आदेश

Updating…..

 



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December 22, 2019 0 comments
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Fact SheetHealth in DataInternational Plan, Policy & GuidelinesNon- Communicable Diseases (NCDs)Public HealthPublic Health UpdateResearch & PublicationTobacco Control

WHO launches new report on global tobacco use trends

by Public Health Update December 19, 2019
written by Public Health Update

WHO launches new report on global tobacco use trends

Number of males using tobacco globally on the decline, showing that government-led control efforts work to save lives, protect health, beat tobacco

19 December 2019, News release
For the first time, the World Health Organization projects that the number of males using tobacco is on the decline, indicating a powerful shift in the global tobacco epidemic. The findings, published today in a new WHO report, demonstrate how government-led action can protect communities from tobacco, save lives and prevent people suffering tobacco-related harm.

“Declines in tobacco use amongst males mark a turning point in the fight against tobacco,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “For many years now we had witnessed a steady rise in the number of males using deadly tobacco products. But now, for the first time, we are seeing a decline in male use, driven by governments being tougher on the tobacco industry. WHO will continue working closely with countries to maintain this downward trend.”

During nearly the past two decades, overall global tobacco use has fallen, from 1.397 billion in 2000 to 1.337 billion in 2018, or by approximately 60 million people, according to the WHO global report on trends in prevalence of tobacco use 2000-2025 third edition.

This has been largely driven by reductions in the number of females using these products (346 million in 2000 down to 244 million in 2018, or a fall over around 100 million).

Over the same period, male tobacco use had risen by around 40 million, from 1.050 billion in 2000 to 1.093 billion in 2018 (or 82% of the world’s current 1.337 billion tobacco users).

But positively, the new report shows that the number of male tobacco users has stopped growing and is projected to decline by more than 1 million fewer male users come  2020 (or 1.091 billion) compared to 2018 levels, and 5 million less by 2025 (1.087 billion).

By 2020, WHO projects there will be 10 million fewer tobacco users, male and female, compared to 2018, and another 27 million less by 2025, amounting to 1.299 billion. Some 60% of countries have been experiencing a decline in tobacco use since 2010.

 “Reductions in global tobacco use demonstrate that when governments introduce and strengthen their comprehensive evidence-based actions, they can protect the well-being of their citizens and communities,” said Dr Ruediger Krech, Director of Health Promotion at WHO.

Despite such gains, progress in meeting the global target set by governments to cut tobacco use by 30% by 2025 remains off track. Based on current progress, a 23% reduction will be achieved by 2025. Only 32 countries are currently on track to reach the 30% reduction target.

However, the projected decline in tobacco use among males, who represent the overwhelming majority of tobacco users, can be built on and used to accelerate efforts to reach to the global target, said Dr Vinayak Prasad, head of WHO’s tobacco control unit.

“Fewer people are using tobacco, which is a major step for global public health,” said Dr Prasad. “But the work is not yet done. Without stepped up national action, the projected fall in tobacco use still won’t meet global reduction targets. We must never let up in the fight against Big Tobacco.”

Other key findings of the report included:

  • Children: Approximately 43 million children (aged 13-15) used tobacco in 2018 (14 million girls and 29 million boys).
  • Women: The number of women using tobacco in 2018 was 244 million. By 2025, there should be 32 million fewer women tobacco users. Most gains are being made in low- and middle-income countries. Europe is the region making the slowest progress in reducing tobacco use among females.
  • Asian trends: WHO’s South East Asian Region has the highest rates of tobacco use, of more than 45% of males and females aged 15 years and over, but the trend is projected to decline rapidly to similar levels seen in the European and Western Pacific regions of around 25% by 2025. The Western Pacific Region, including China, is projected to overtake South East Asia as the region with the highest average rate among men.
  • Trends in the Americas: Fifteen countries in the Americas are on track to reach the 30% tobacco use reduction target by 2030, making it the best performing of WHO’s six regions.
  • Policy action: more and more countries are implementing effective tobacco control measures, which are having the desired effect of reducing tobacco use. Tobacco taxes not only help reduce tobacco consumption and health-care costs, but also represent a rev­enue stream for financing for development in many countries.

Every year, more than 8 million people die from tobacco use, approximately half of its users. More than 7 million of those deaths are from direct tobacco use while around 1.2 million are due to non-smokers being exposed to second-hand smoke. Most tobacco-related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, areas that are targets of intensive tobacco industry interference and marketing.

DOWNLOAD REPORT


The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control

NEPAL–NCDs risk factors STEPS Survey 2019 – Tobacco Factsheet

13th Asia Pacific Conference on Tobacco or Health 2020 (APACT 2020)

WHO Report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic, 2019

Bogor Declaration on Tobacco Control and NCDs Prevention #APCAT2019

Accelerate actions to slash tobacco use and advance health across the WHO South-East Asia Region

December 19, 2019 0 comments
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Global Health NewsLife Style & Public Health NutritionPublic HealthPublic Health NewsPublic Health Update

More than one in three low- and middle-income countries face both extremes of malnutrition

by Public Health Update December 16, 2019
written by Public Health Update

More than one in three low- and middle-income countries face both extremes of malnutrition

16 December 2019 

News release

Twin presence of obesity and undernutrition reflects shifts in food systems

16 December 2019 – Geneva. A new approach is needed to help reduce undernutrition and obesity at the same time, as the issues become increasingly connected due to rapid changes in countries’ food systems. This is especially important in low- and middle-income countries, according to a new four-paper report published in The Lancet. More than a third of such countries had overlapping forms of malnutrition (45 of 123 countries in the 1990s, and 48 of 126 countries in the 2010s), particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, and east Asia and the Pacific.

Undernutrition and obesity can lead to effects across generations as both maternal undernutrition and obesity are associated with poor health in offspring. However, because of the speed of change in food systems, more people are being exposed to both forms of malnutrition at different points in their lifetimes, which further increases harmful health effects.

“We are facing a new nutrition reality,” said lead author of the report Dr Francesco Branca, Director of the Department of Nutrition for Health and Development, World Health Organization. “We can no longer characterize countries as low-income and undernourished, or high-income and only concerned with obesity. All forms of malnutrition have a common denominator – food systems that fail to provide all people with healthy, safe, affordable, and sustainable diets. Changing this will require action across food systems – from production and processing, through trade and distribution, pricing, marketing, and labelling, to consumption and waste. All relevant policies and investments must be radically re-examined.”

In a Lancet editorial accompanying the report, Dr Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief of The Lancet, says: “Today’s publication of the WHO Series on the Double Burden of Malnutrition comes after 12 months of Lancet articles exploring nutrition in all its forms… With these and other articles across Lancet journals throughout 2019, it has become clear that nutrition and malnutrition need to be approached from multiple perspectives, and although findings have sometimes converged, there is still work to be done to understand malnutrition’s multiple manifestations… With 6 years remaining in the UN Decade of Action on Nutrition (2016-2025), this Series and Comment define the future direction required to achieve the global goal of eradicating hunger and preventing malnutrition in all its forms.”

Globally, estimates suggest that almost 2.3 billion children and adults are overweight, and more than 150 million children are stunted. However, in low- and middle-income countries these emerging issues overlap in individuals, families, communities and countries. The new report explores the trends behind this intersection – known as the double burden of malnutrition – as well as the societal and food system changes that may be causing it, its biological explanation and effects, and policy measures that may help address malnutrition in all its forms.

The authors used survey data from low- and middle-income countries in the 1990s and 2010s to estimate which countries faced a double burden of malnutrition (ie, in the population, more than 15% of people had wasting, more than 30% were stunted, more than 20% of women had thinness, and more than 20% of people were overweight).

In the 2010s, 14 countries with some of the lowest incomes in the world had newly developed a double burden of malnutrition, compared with the 1990s. However, fewer low- and middle-income countries with the highest incomes were affected than in the 1990s. The authors say that this reflects the increasing prevalence of being overweight in the poorest countries, where populations still face stunting, wasting and thinness.

High-quality diets reduce the risk of malnutrition in all its forms by promoting healthy growth, development, and immunity, and preventing obesity and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) throughout life. The components of healthy diets are: optimal breastfeeding practices in the first two years; a diversity and abundance of fruits and vegetables, wholegrains, fibre, nuts, and seeds; modest amounts of animal source foods; minimal amounts of processed meats, and minimal amounts of foods and beverages high in energy and added amounts of sugar, saturated fat, trans fat, and salt.

The Kathmandu Declaration Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Movement Global Gathering 2019

Multi-sector Nutrition Plan II (2018-2022) Nepal (English)

Breastfeeding provides the strongest foundation for lifelong health and optimal nutrition

Govt to implement second Multi-Sectoral Nutrition Plan in all 77 districts

“Emerging malnutrition issues are a stark indicator of the people who are not protected from the factors that drive poor diets. The poorest low- and middle-income countries are seeing a rapid transformation in the way people eat, drink, and move at work, home, in transport and in leisure,” said report author Professor Barry Popkin, University of North Carolina, USA. “The new nutrition reality is driven by changes to the food system, which have increased availability of ultra-processed foods that are linked to increased weight gain, while also adversely affecting infant and pre-schooler diets. These changes include disappearing fresh food markets, increasing supermarkets, and the control of the food chain by supermarkets, and global food, catering and agriculture companies in many countries.”

Exposure to undernutrition early in life followed by becoming overweight from childhood onwards increases the risk of a range of non-communicable diseases – making the double burden of malnutrition a key factor driving the emerging global epidemics of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke, and cardiovascular disease. Negative effects can also pass across generations – for example, the effect of maternal obesity on the likelihood of the child having obesity may be exacerbated if the mother was undernourished in early life.

Despite physiological links, actions to address all forms of malnutrition have historically not taken account of these or other key factors, including early-life nutrition, diet quality, socioeconomic factors, and food environments. In addition, there is some evidence that programmes addressing undernutrition have unintentionally increased risks for obesity and diet-related NCDs in low-income and middle-income countries where food environments are changing rapidly.

While it is critical to maintain these programmes for undernutrition, they need to be redesigned to do no harm. Existing undernutrition programmes delivered through health services, social safety nets, educational settings, and agriculture and food systems present opportunities to address obesity and diet-related NCDs. 

The report identifies a set of ‘double-duty actions’ that simultaneously prevent or reduce the risk of nutritional deficiencies leading to underweight, wasting, stunting or micronutrient deficiencies, and obesity or NCDs, with the same intervention, programme, or policy. These range from improved antenatal care and breastfeeding practices, to social welfare, and to new agricultural and food system policies with healthy diets as their primary goal.

“Continuing with business-as-usual is not fit for purpose in the new nutrition reality. The good news is that there are some powerful opportunities to use the same platforms to address different forms of malnutrition. The time is now to seize these opportunities for ‘double duty action’ to get results” said Professor Corinna Hawkes, Centre for Food Policy, City, University of London, UK.

To create the systemic changes needed to end malnutrition in all its forms, the authors call on governments, the UN, civil society, academics, the media, donors, the private sector and economic platforms to address the double burden of malnutrition and bring in new actors, such as grass-roots organizations, farmers and their unions, faith-based leaders, advocates for planetary health, innovators and investors who are financing fair and green companies, city mayors and consumer associations.

“Given the political economy of food, the commodification of food systems, and growing patterns of inequality worldwide, the new nutrition reality calls for a broadened community of actors who work in mutually reinforcing and interconnected ways on a global scale,” says Dr Branca. “Without a profound food system transformation, the economic, social, and environmental costs of inaction will hinder the growth and development of individuals and societies for decades to come.”

WHO


A new nutrition manifesto for a new nutrition reality – THE LANCET 

The double burden of malnutrition– THE LANCET

 


NEPAL–NCDs risk factors STEPS Survey 2019 – Tobacco Factsheet 

National NCD risk factor survey (WHO-STEP survey) 2019, Nepal

December 16, 2019 0 comments
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eHealth Roadmap- Ministry of Health and Population, Nepal

by Public Health Update December 14, 2019
written by Public Health Update

eHealth Roadmap- Ministry of Health and Population, Nepal

DOWNLOAD PDF FILE

DOWNLOAD PDF FILE


  • National Guideline for Snake bite Management in Nepal 2019
  • Employees Provident Fund Health Insurance Package
  • Female Community Health Volunteer Modular Package 2076
  • Guideline on TB Treatment, Transmission Management and Research Center Establishment and Operational Criteria, 2076
  • Health Policy 2076 | MoSD, Karnali Province- Nepal
  • NEPAL–NCDs risk factors STEPS Survey 2019 – Tobacco Factsheet
  • Nepal STEPS Survey 2019 Alcohol Consumption and Policy Fact Sheet
  • National NCD risk factor survey (WHO-STEP survey) 2019, Nepal
  • Basic Health Service Package 2075, DoHS, MoHP Nepal
  • Guideline for Basic Health Service Centre Construction and Operation (Revised)
  • MORE GUIDELINES, PLAN AND POLICIES 
December 14, 2019 0 comments
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Rapid Communication: Key changes to the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis

by Public Health Update December 12, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Rapid Communication: Key changes to the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis

11 December 2019 | GENEVA – Significant improvements in treatment outcomes and quality of life for patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) are expected, following key updates to treatment approaches, announced by the World Health Organization  (WHO) in a Rapid Communication released  today.
 
Treatment success for multidrug-resistant and rifampicin resistant TB (MDR/RR -TB) (1) is currently low in many countries. This could be increased by improving access to new regimens that are more effective, less toxic and easier to implement for eligible patients. In November 2019, WHO convened a meeting of  its Guideline Development Group to update WHO Consolidated Guidelines on the treatment of drug-resistant TB, based on new evidence shared by countries, research and technical partners, and through responses to the public call for data.

The changes suggested by the evidence review are the phasing out of shorter injectable containing regimens and the introduction of a shorter all-oral bedaquiline containing regimen for eligible MDR/RR-TB patients. In addition, in patients with extensively drug resistant (XDR -TB) (2), a shorter regimen with bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid may be used under operational research conditions as an alternative to the longer regimen.

This Rapid Communication has been released in advance of the updated guidelines expected in 2020,  to inform national TB programmes and other stakeholders about the key implications for treatment of MDR/RR-TB and XDR-TB in order to allow for rapid transition and planning at the country level.

Moving forward

Accelerated efforts to address the MDR-TB crisis are essential to end the global TB epidemic and achieve the targets of the UN High Level Meeting political declaration, WHO End TB Strategy and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. 
 
In 2020, WHO will convene a Global Consultation to inform countries, technical partners, donors and civil society on the key changes in the updated Consolidated Guidelines on the Treatment of Drug-Resistant TB. The meeting will aim to support countries to update their national guidelines, inform programme budgets and enable monitoring systems to facilitate rapid transition to more effective treatment regimens for patients with drug-resistant TB.
 
“The treatment landscape for patients with drug-resistant TB continues to improve thanks to research that is generating new evidence. We would like to thank patients, countries, technical partners, donors, civil society and other key TB stakeholders for their support throughout this guidelines development process” said Dr Tereza Kasaeva, Director of the WHO Global TB Programme. “Now we ask for renewed political commitment and stakeholder support to work with national TB programmes to improve treatment outcomes for MDR-TB patients and save lives worldwide.”  
 
The changes suggested  in the rapid communication reinforce the Joint Statement issued by the WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and WHO Civil Society Taskforce on TB.  In addition, in advance of the Guideline Development Group meeting, a series of consultations were held with civil society representatives and partners through webinars and calls on the MDR-TB guideline development process by the WHO Global TB Programme, the Office of the WHO Chief Scientist and other departments.

(1) MDR-TB: Resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis against at least isoniazid and rifampicin, the cornerstone medicines for treatment of TB. Rifampicin-resistant disease on its own requires similar clinical management as MDR-TB.

(2) XDR-TB: Resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to any fluoroquinolone and to at least one of three second-line injectable drugs (capreomycin, kanamycin and amikacin), in addition to multidrug resistance.

DOWNLOAD: Rapid Communication: Key changes to the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis


Guideline on TB Treatment, Transmission Management and Research Center Establishment and Operational Criteria, 2076

NTP, Nepal: New TB Treatment Algorithm & Regimen (Updated)

WHO announces landmark changes in MDR-TB treatment regimens

December 12, 2019 0 comments
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Sri Lanka has eliminated mother to child transmission of HIV and syphilis

by Public Health Update December 12, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Sri Lanka has eliminated mother to child transmission of HIV and syphilis

Dec 4, 2019  Sri Lanka is being declared as a country which has eliminated mother to child transmission of HIV and Syphilis by the World Health Organization.

In September 2015, the UN General Assembly adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development that includes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) out of which goal 3 is on good health and wellbeing. Ensuring healthy lives and promoting well-being at all ages is essential for sustainable development of a nation. Eradication of Polio, elimination of malaria and measles are major milestones which contributed to a marked reduction in neonatal, infant and child mortality rates in Sri Lanka.
According to the reported data by the National STD AIDS Control Programme, by the end of 2018, 85 children were infected with HIV due to mother to child transmission. Annually, a very few children are being newly diagnosed with Congenital Syphilis.
Programme for Prevention of Syphilis commenced in 1954 and in 2002 the Programme for Prevention of Paediatric HIV was established. In the year 2013, these two programmes were combined and further strengthened as “Elimination of mother to child transmission (EMTCT) of HIV and Syphilis Programme” on a multidisciplinary approach. The strong links between maternal and child health services and sexually transmitted infection and HIV services in central and district levels government health sector were further strengthened and links were developed with private sector services. The Family Health Bureau (FHB) and the National STD & AIDS Control Programme(NSACP) worked closely to take services to the grassroots level through MOH offices and STD clinics in the districts. Provincial and district health authorities facilitated the implementation of the programme in the communities. The programme was supported by UN organizations, NGOs, persons living with HIV and Key populations. Sustainability of the programme is assured through government funding.
HIV and syphilis testing coverage among pregnant women increased to >95% by end 2017. All pregnant women with HIV or syphilis and babies exposed were managed by local teams including MOH, Venereologists, Obstetricians and Paediatricians. All pregnant women diagnosed with HIV infection received EMTCT services and delivered uninfected children. By end 2018, country had achieved the set targets to be eligible to request for validation of EMTCT of HIV and Syphilis status.
This programme contributed to the development of the country by assuring child health, reducing maternal illnesses and deaths and by increasing accessibility to services for women in disadvantaged situations. Further, it normalized the HIV test and promoted open discussion on HIV.
In July 2019, the ministry of health made a formal request to WHO to validate the EMTCT of HIV and syphilis status in the country. This was followed by the visit of the regional validation team (RVT)of experts, representing WHO South-East Asian Regional Officein mid-September 2019 to assess the elimination status. After a thorough assessment, the regional validation team presented its’ report on Sri Lanka to Global Validation Committeeat WHO headquarters based in Geneva.
The WHO headquarters, based on the decision of Global Validation Committee, has formally declared that Sri Lanka has eliminated mother to child transmission of HIV and syphilis.
This achievement will have an inspiring impact on the resolve to End AIDS by 2025, five years ahead the global target in 2030, a commitment undertaken by the country.

Maldives ?? eliminates mother-to-child transmission of HIV, Syphilis

WHO South-East Asia Region sets 2023 target to eliminate measles, rubella

Sri Lanka ?? eliminates measles

Thailand becomes trans fat free country ??

Nepal: first country in South-East Asia validated for eliminating trachoma

Kathmandu declared fully immunised

A milestone for humanity: Two strains of polio are now eradicated

Political Declaration of the High-level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage


December 12, 2019 0 comments
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International Universal Health Coverage Day: Keep the Promise!

by Public Health Update December 12, 2019
written by Public Health Update

International Universal Health Coverage Day: Keep the Promise!

On 12 December 2012, the United Nations General Assembly endorsed a resolution urging countries to accelerate progress toward universal health coverage (UHC) – the idea that everyone, everywhere should have access to quality, affordable health care – as an essential priority for international development. On 12 December 2017, the United Nations proclaimed 12 December as International Universal Health Coverage Day (UHC Day) by resolution 72/138.

Aim

International Universal Health Coverage Day aims to raise awareness of the need for strong and resilient health systems and universal health coverage with multi-stakeholder partners. Each year on 12 December, UHC advocates raise their voices to share the stories of the millions of people still waiting for health, champion what we have achieved so far, call on leaders to make bigger and smarter investments in health, and encourage diverse groups to make commitments to help move the world closer to UHC by 2030. (United Nations)

Universal Health Coverage (UHC)

Political Declaration of the High-level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage

High-Performance Health-Financing for UHC: Driving Sustainable, Inclusive Growth in the 21st Century

Tokyo Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: All Together to Accelerate Progress towards UHC

2019 Monitoring Report: Primary Health Care on the Road to Universal Health Coverage

Universal Health Coverage Day 2019: ”Keep the Promise’’

Universal Health Coverage Day 2019: Major Events in Nepal ??

Universal Health Coverage in Nepal (Presentations, Notes, Videos & Articles)

Key Message

  • On 23 September, all @UN Member States came together to sign the most ambitious & comprehensive political declaration on health in history. This #UHCDay, let’s call on our leaders to #KeepthePromise.
  • Health is a human right that too many people are waiting for. When will leaders keep the promise of #HealthForAll? #UHCDay
  • Every country is on the record committing to #HealthForAll. We have only one message for them: #KeepthePromise. 
  • Enough talk. This #UHCDay, we must Keep the Promise of #HealthForAll.
  • Universal health coverage is a nation’s promise to its people. It’s time that leaders kept their word. #UHCDay 
  • No one, anywhere, should go bankrupt to get the health services they need. Period. #HealthForAll #UHCDay
  • 210M people worldwide must spend >25% of their household budget to get the health services they need. No one should have to choose between health & other necessities. #HealthForAll #KeepThePromise
  • At least half of the world’s population lack access to essential health services. This is unacceptable. #KeepthePromise of #HealthForAll, everywhere. #UHCDay 
  • We have made the case for universal health coverage ethically, economically and politically. Now is the time to deliver on that promise. #UHCDay #HealthForAll
  • At the #HLMUHC, leaders agreed that universal health coverage is the responsibility of the entire government. Now, they must Keep the Promise. #HealthForAll
  • #UHCDay Reminder: We can’t Keep the Promise of #HealthforAll w/out addressing social, economic & environmental determinants of health.
  • #KeepthePromise: Increase investment in #PrimaryHealthCare by at least 1% of GDP. #UHCDay #HealthForAll
  • This #UHCDay, we have one message: #KeepThePromise of strong, equitable health systems that #LeaveNoOneBehind. #HealthForAll
  • No matter your gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, age, ability or citizenship, #HealthForAll means all people can get the health services they need, w/out discrimination or financial hardship. #HealthForAll
  • In the fight for #HealthForAll, we must put the needs of the poorest & most marginalized groups first, not last. #LeaveNoOneBehind #UHCDay
  • #KeepThePromise to measure what matters: to #LeaveNoOneBehind, countries must count everyone. #HealthForAll
  • To secure #HealthForAll, we must build accountable & transparent institutions that can fight corruption and ensure social justice. #UHCDay
  • On #UHCDay, we demand strong regulatory systems that ensure medical products people can afford and trust. #HealthForAll
  • To #KeepthePromise of #HealthforAll, legislators must promote the responsible use of emerging technologies. This means stronger legislations that prioritize public safety & privacy over profit. #UHCDay
  • Leaders have agreed that quality & access must go hand-in-hand. Our response? Keep the Promise. #HealthForAll #UHCDay
  • #PrimaryHealthCare can provide people with the right care, at the right time, right in their communities – and it’s one of the best ways to help people lead a healthy life.
  • Improving #PrimaryHealthCare goes beyond employing health workers. To achieve #HealthForAll by 2030, we must support frontline caregivers at all levels of education, training, employment & retention. #UHCDay
  • How do we achieve #HealthForAll? Stop chronic under-investment in the health workforce and employ 9 million additional nurses and midwives by 2030. #UHCDay #KeepthePromise
  • Investing in #HealthforAll means investing in the capacity of policymakers, researchers, practitioners & health workers: the backbones of strong health systems. #KeepthePromise #UHCDay
  • Dear world leaders: #KeepthePromise to strengthen health systems by increasing domestic public financing. #HealthForAll #UHCDay
  • On #UHCDay, we demand that leaders #KeepthePromise to cut down out-of-pocket health expenses by increasing domestic financing for public health. #HealthforAll
  • Investing in a population’s health pays dividends to entire countries. #HealthforAll is not only the right choice, but the smart choice. #UHCDay #KeepthePromise
  • Leaders have spoken: Universal health coverage is everyone’s business. This #UHCDay, we need to see collective action to Keep the Promise of #HealthForAll.
  • In 2019, every health system should be gender-responsive. We must meet the unique health needs of all genders to truly #LeaveNoOneBehind on the path to #HealthForAll. #UHCDay
  • According to @WHO, 70% of the health and social workforce is comprised of women often in unpaid or underpaid positions. This is unacceptable. On #UHCDay, we demand investments in gender parity on the road to #HealthForAll.
  • On #UHCDay, we demand that world leaders #KeepthePromise to promote #genderequality when designing, implementing and monitoring health policies. This means taking into account the specific needs and rights of women and girls.
  • Women make up 70% of the health & social workforce globally, but they are woefully underrepresented in leadership roles. Dismantling gender inequality requires a collective commitment from all sectors of society. #UHCDay #HealthForAll

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December 12, 2019 0 comments
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1st National Workshop on Integrated Healthcare Waste Management and WASH in Healthcare Facilities

by Public Health Update December 10, 2019
written by Public Health Update

1st National Workshop on Integrated Healthcare Waste Management and WASH in Healthcare Facilities

DAY 3

DAY 2ND 

 

DAY FIRST

FOR MOBILE: CLICK HERE

FOR MOBILE: CLICK HERE

Workshop: 1st National Workshop on Integrated Healthcare Waste Management (IHCWM) and Water Sanitation & Hygiene (WASH) in Healthcare Facilities

Venue: Hyatt Regency Kathmandu
Date: 10 – 12 December 2019

Organizers

The Ministry of Health and Population (MoHP) together with concerned line ministries and supporting partners like GIZ, WHO, UNDP, UNICEF, WaterAid, SNV, are jointly organizing this learning workshop on “Integrated Healthcare Waste Management and WASH in HCFs”.

Objectives

Exchange learning on sustainable practices of healthcare waste management and WASH in HCFs that ensures the equitable access to quality healthcare services by reducing infections and adverse impacts on public health and environment.

Approach

The learning workshop brings together Nepali and international key actors to raise awareness for the current issues in IHCWM and WASH in Nepal and provide a forum for knowledge exchange for the participants. Knowledge exchange is promoted by presentations, panel discussions, thematic working groups, an innovative market place showcasing relevant technologies and initiatives and the final summary concluding the key lessons learned and the way forward for Nepal.

Expected Output

  1. Exchange of knowledge, tools, technology and practice of sustainable healthcare waste management system and WASH in healthcare facilities at subnational level.
  2. To advocate for global and national actions to improve healthcare waste management and WASH in HCFs and support in decision making and resource allocation.
  3. Common understanding on urgency of joint effort at subnational level to address the issues of unsafe management of hazardous wastes and poor practice of WASH in HCFs.
  4. National and international networking, alliance, peer learning, inter and intra sectoral cooperation for learning and innovations.
  5. Roadmap for Integrated Health Care Waste Management for Nepal with the provided IHCWM model.
  6. Endorsement of model and commitment of stakeholders to implement the Model.
December 10, 2019 0 comments
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International Plan, Policy & GuidelinesPublic Health UpdateReportsResearch & Publication

The 2019 Human Development Report (HDR) #HDR2019

by Public Health Update December 9, 2019
written by Public Health Update

UNDP #HDR2019 “Beyond income, beyond averages, beyond today: inequalities in human development in the 21st Century”

To answer global protests, tackle new inequalities — UN report
2019 Human Development Report says business as usual will not solve new generation of inequalities

DOWNLOAD FULL REPORT: CLICK HERE


Nepal

  • Human Development Index (HDI) Value 0.579 (2018)
  • Human Development Index (HDI) RANK : 147 (2018)
  • Gender Development Index: 0.897 (2018)
  • Gender Inequality Index: 0.476
  • Lost health expectancy: 13.8

KEY MESSAGES OF THE REPORT

  • Despite the considerable gains in health, education and living standards the world has witnessed in the last decades, something in our globalized society is not working. The connecting thread is #inequality, argues #HDR2019.
  • The new #HDR2019 says despite substantial gains in health, education and living standards, the basic needs of many remain unmet while a next generation of #inequalities is open, determining people’s opportunities in 21st Century & beyond.
  • While the gap in basic living standards is narrowing for millions of people, the necessities to thrive have evolved. A new generation of inequalities in human development is opening up around education, technology and climate change, hindering the progress of SDGs.
  • A new generation of #inequalities in #humandev is opening up. In countries with very high human development, for example, subscriptions to fixed broadband are growing 15 times faster.
  • A new generation of #inequalities in #humandev is opening up. The proportion of adults with tertiary education is growing more than six times faster than in countries with low human development.
  • #HDR2019 analyzes #inequality in three steps: #beyondincome, beyond averages, and beyond today. But the problem of inequality is not beyond solutions, and the report proposes a battery of policy options to tackle it.
  • Reversing #inequality in #humandev requires more than redistribution. It needs decoupling political & economic power, leveling the economic playing field and continuing to close gaps in basic deprivations, while reversing new, emerging types of inequalities.
  • According to #HDR2019’s inequality-adjusted #HumanDevelopment Index, 20% of #humandev progress was lost through #inequalities in 2018. Policies should look at but also go #beyondincome, says new report.
  • #HDR2019 finds #inequality begins even before birth and can accumulate, amplified by differences in health & education, into adulthood. Solutions must therefore start at or before birth, including investing in children’s learning, health & nutrition.
  • Early childhood investments must continue through a person’s life, during & after their time in the workforce. Pro-productivity policies must be coupled with antitrust and other policies to fix market imbalances, argues #HDR2019
  • Averages often hide what’s really going on in society, says #HDR2019. We need more detailed info to tackle #inequality – especially in addressing #multidimensionalpoverty, leaving no one behind, & promoting #genderequality
  • #HDR2019 estimates that it will take 202 years to close the #gendergap in economic opportunity alone. Just as progress on the #SDGs should be accelerating, the report’s 2019 Gender #Inequality Index says it is actually slowing.
  • #Climatechange hurts #humandev in many ways, with additional 250,000 expected deaths per YEAR from its effects between 2030 & 2050, says #HDR2019. But there are options to tackle it, if we act now.
  • Government action to tackle #inequalities cannot be based on policies in isolation or thinking there exists a single silver bullet. Rather, policies should link the expansion and distribution of both capabilities and income.
  • The Asia-Pacific region has witnessed the steepest rise globally in human development – but multidimensional poverty continues to drive inequality.
  • Leaping ahead, lagging behind? Asia-Pacific leads the world in access to broadband – yet may be vulnerable to new forms of inequalities in higher education and climate resilience. 
  • According to #HDR2019, East Asia stands to reap much of the global economic benefit of AI by 2030. But progress should benefit all.
  • No other region has seen such rapid human development progress as Asia and the Pacific. South Asia grew fastest, with the most progress in life expectancy and schooling.
  • According to #HDR2019, only 25% of the tertiary school-aged population in South Asia and 44% in East Asia and the Pacific are enrolled in higher education.
  • Rapid progress in the Asia-Pacific region hasn’t benefited everyone: 661 million of the world’s 1.3 billion in #multidimensionalpoverty live in the region.
  • Over 22% of South Asian kids under 5 experience nutritional #inequality at home, where one child is malnourished while a sibling is not.

DOWNLOAD FULL REPORT: CLICK HERE


 

December 9, 2019 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic HealthUniversal Health Coverage

Universal Health Coverage Day 2019: ”Keep the Promise’’

by Public Health Update December 8, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Universal Health Coverage Day 2019: ”Keep the Promise’’

Universal Health Coverage Day on 12 December is the annual rallying point for the growing movement for #HealthForAll. It marks the anniversary of the United Nations’ historic and unanimous endorsement of universal health coverage in 2012. The main objective of  UHC Day is to raise awareness of the need for strong and resilient health systems and universal health coverage (UHC).

Theme

The theme of UHC Day 2019 is ‘Keep the Promise’

In September, all UN Member States agreed to a Political Declaration on UHC. Heads of state, at the High-Level Meeting on UHC at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on 23 September 2019, demonstrated strong political vision and commitment to ensuring UHC for the people they serve. In the resulting political declaration, UN Member States recognized the importance of primary health care as “the cornerstone of a sustainable health system for universal health coverage and health-related Sustainable Development Goals”.  Now, UHC advocates will take their turn to send them a message and this year’s UHC Day campaign theme says it loud and clear: Keep the Promise.

  • We need to see action plans to guarantee health as a right, not a privilege. 
  • We need to see real investment in a society where all people—regardless of gender, race, religion, citizenship, age, ability, sexual orientation, or wealth—can get the quality health care they need and trust without facing financial hardship. 
  • We need to see strong, equitable health systems that truly leave no one behind. 

12.12: Take Action

Spotlight the promises that have been made: The most ambitious and comprehensive political declaration in history only means something if people know about it. This UHC Day, highlight what your country promised at the HLM, and why we need to follow through.

Get leaders on the record, and get specific: “Health for All” is much easier said than done. This 12.12, clarify where your leaders stand. Host a public rally, engage media or invite policymakers to speak – and demand to know what changes they will make for your community, and when.

Make sure the right voices are in the room: We can’t change the system without changing whose voices take priority. Use your platforms to meaningfully engage health workers, young people and communities whose rights, needs and experiences have been sidelined for too long.

Invest in allies, new and old: Find a UHC Day activity happening near you and show up; reach out to fellow civil society groups and see how you can support each other; build strong, diverse partnerships that will support the movement long after 12 December.

Read more: UHC Day


Recommended readings

High-Performance Health-Financing for UHC: Driving Sustainable, Inclusive Growth in the 21st Century

Political Declaration of the High-level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage

World Health Statistics 2019: Monitoring health for the SDGs

Tokyo Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: All Together to Accelerate Progress towards UHC

Universal Health Coverage (UHC)


Universal Health Coverage Day 2019: Major Events in Nepal ??

December 8, 2019 0 comments
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