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Two Nipah virus cases detected in India; Three districts on alert

Two Nipah virus cases detected in India; Three districts on alert

Straits Timesa day ago
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The Nipah virus is a zoonotic disease spread by contact with infected animals, such as fruit bats and pigs.
NEW DEHLI - Kerala has reported two confirmed cases of Nipah virus – one from the Malappuram district and the other from the Palakkad district.
The first case is that of a 38-year-old woman, who tested positive for the virus at the Pune Virology Lab. Over 100 people on the patient's contact list are under the high-risk category.
The woman is currently undergoing treatment at a private hospital in Perinthalmanna. She sought treatment at three different locations, including a clinic near her home, after experiencing fever 20 days ago.
The second case is that of a child, who recently died. The postmortem report revealed that the child was infected with Nipah virus. An alert has been issued in three districts- Kozhikode, Malappuram, and Palakkad.
District Collectors have been instructed to make necessary arrangements for declaring containment zones if required. Helplines at both state and district levels are being activated. THE STATESMAN/ASIA NEWS NETWORK
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MOH studying 18 proposals to integrate TCM into public healthcare
MOH studying 18 proposals to integrate TCM into public healthcare

Straits Times

time6 hours ago

  • Straits Times

MOH studying 18 proposals to integrate TCM into public healthcare

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Health Minister Ong Ye Kung noted that TCM is already an integral part of Singapore's healthcare landscape, with one in five adults Singaporeans relying on TCM services each year. SINGAPORE - The use of acupuncture to treat migraines, for post-stroke rehabilitation and cancer-related care could soon be integrated into the national healthcare system under a sandbox initiative. They are part of 18 proposals for evidence-based traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) treatments that authorities are evaluating under a TCM sandbox initiative, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said on July 6. The other TCM treatments that healthcare institutions under the three healthcare clusters here have proposed for the sandbox include the use of Chinese medicine for treating gastrointestinal disorders and chronic pain, alongside conventional treatments. If implemented in public clinics and hospitals, these treatments could become eligible for subsidies and MediSave coverage, which today apply to use of acupuncture for lower back and neck pain. Speaking at a forum on the use of evidence-based TCM in western medicine practice, Mr Ong said the latest move follows from his announcement in October 2024 that the Ministry of Health (MOH) was evaluating the efficacy of other TCM therapies beyond those two treatments. He emphasised that this was not about wholesale adoption of TCM treatments, but a thoughtful selection of therapies that have been shown to work, complementing western medicine to improve outcomes for patients, including those who do not respond well to conventional treatments alone. To start, these proposed treatments will be evaluated for scientific robustness by an MOH-commissioned committee, and then trialed 'in a controlled environment' in public healthcare institutions for one to two years. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore First BTO project in Sembawang North to be offered in July launch Business High Court orders Instagram seller to pay Louis Vuitton $200,000 in damages over counterfeit goods Singapore TTSH to demolish century-old pavilion wards, keeping one as heritage marker Singapore Red Lions and naval divers join forces for Jump of Unity at NDP 2025 Singapore His world crashed when he got F9 in O-level Tamil but PropNex co-founder Ismail Gafoor beat the odds Asia HIV surge in the Philippines amid poor sex education, policy gaps World 'Formed to give you back your freedom': Elon Musk says he has created a new US political party 'During the sandbox phase, our foremost priority is to ensure patient safety and maintain high standards of care,' he said. 'The evaluation will also enable us to assess the cost-effectiveness of these treatments.' Mr Ong noted that TCM is already an integral part of Singapore's healthcare landscape, with one in five adults Singaporeans relying on TCM services each year, according to the 2022 National Population Health Survey. 'Our vision is not simply adding more TCM services to hospital settings, but to create a really integrative care model where the strengths of both systems can be leveraged for optimal patient care,' he added. At the forum, Mr Ong also announced that from 2026, a national-level award will recognise exemplary TCM practitioners. There will be two categories of awards - one for outstanding physicians and another for outstanding educators - and recipients will be awarded a cash amount of $5,000 each. Nominees for the awards must be Singaporeans or permanent residents currently practising here, with at least 15 years of experience. The forum - organised by SingHealth and the Academy for Chinese Medicine - was attended by about 420 people, most of whom were doctors and TCM physicians. Addressing attendees, National Neuroscience Institute senior neurological consultant Lim Shih Hui said the forum, which he co-chaired, will help foster a common language between these practitioners to bridge diagnoses in Western medicine and TCM. By integrating evidence-based traditional and modern medicine practices, the healthcare system can empower patients to make better informed decisions and benefit from the strengths of both medical systems, he added. Speaking to reporters, Prof Lim noted that SingHealth has been looking to improve treatment for conditions and diseases that Western medicine struggles to tackle, due to limitations or the lack of data. He said the public health cluster - the largest here - submitted more than half of the proposals to incorporate TCM for treatment of conditions including migraine, epilepsy and other disorders. 'Migraine is a very common thing, but medication for migraines, though effective, have side effects,' he said. 'So if we can use TCM treatment to complement western treatment, the patient will have good effects as well as fewer side effects.' SingHealth deputy group chief executive for medical and clinical services Fong Kok Yong, told forum participants that integration of TCM will be contingent on extensive clinical research. To this end, he suggested that all publicly-funded TCM research grants favour collaboration between the healthcare clusters. He said: 'The larger the cohort being studied, the more robust is the clinical evidence, and I firmly believe that TCM trials that involve all three (public health) clusters and relevant TCM partners are best placed to provide such robust evidence.' President of the Academy of Chinese Medicine Singapore Goh Kia Seng, who co-chaired the forum, told media in Mandarin that he welcomed the launch of the first national-level award for TCM practitioners, of which there are more than 3,200 here. 'This is a sign that the Health Ministry and the country have begun to attach importance to being a TCM practitioner, sending an important message to those in the profession here,' said Dr Goh. The latest announcements add to the Government's hope for TCM - which seeks to maintain balance between the body's systems and the outside environment - to play a bigger role in public health. In October 2024, Mr Ong said TCM practitioners may in future partner general practitioners under an expanded Healthier SG programme. Worldwide, the integration of TCM has already reaped benefits for western medicine, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine's Prof Liu Jianping told attendees. The founder of the university's Centre for Evidence-Based Chinese Medicine cited the therapeutic benefit of sweet wormwood, a herb in TCM that has been recognised for its ability to treat the life-threatening disease of malaria. In 2015, China received its first medicine Nobel Prize for a therapy developed from the herb, which has saved millions of lives across the globe.

Poor sex ed, policy gaps and stigma fuel HIV surge among young Filipinos
Poor sex ed, policy gaps and stigma fuel HIV surge among young Filipinos

Straits Times

time14 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Poor sex ed, policy gaps and stigma fuel HIV surge among young Filipinos

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox As of March 2025, over 139,610 Filipinos are living with HIV, and the government estimates this number will rise to 252,000 by the end of 2025. – Two red lines were all it took to confirm what 26-year-old Luke Galade (not his real name) had already prepared himself for. There were no tears, no shock, just quiet acceptance for the freelance writer and former teacher when he tested positive for HIV in March 2024. The signs were there: a persistent fever, sudden hair loss, shortness of breath and rashes on his palms. Deep down, Mr Galade suspected he had contracted the virus from his former boyfriend, whom he left three months earlier after discovering he had been the third party in a relationship. 'I immediately accepted my fate,' Mr Galade told The Straits Times. 'Over time, I felt anger towards my ex, but I didn't reach out. Then came regret, because I've always dreamt of working abroad. But there are countries that don't allow people like me, who live with HIV, to enter their territories.' Mr Galade is part of a troubling trend in the Philippines, where new HIV infections, especially among youth, are rising at a pace unmatched in the Asia-Pacific, according to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/Aids (Unaids). Data showed that new infections in the region have declined by 13 per cent since 2010, but the Philippines' 543 per cent surge in new cases stands out among countries like Bangladesh (20 per cent) and Papua New Guinea (104 per cent) where HIV cases continue to rise sharply. As at March 2025, over 139,610 Filipinos are living with HIV, and the government estimates this number will rise to 252,000 by year end . Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Asean needs 'bolder reforms' to attract investments in more fragmented global economy: PM Wong Singapore CPF members can make housing, retirement and health insurance plans with new digital platform Singapore CPF's central philosophy of self-reliance remains as pertinent as ever: SM Lee Singapore Credit reports among personal data of 190,000 breached, put for sale on Dark Web; IT vendor fined Asia Dalai Lama hopes to live beyond 130 years, much longer than predicted Singapore Tan Cheng Bock, Hazel Poa step down from PSP leadership; party launches 'renewal plan' Sport Liverpool will move on after Jota's tragic death, but he will never be forgotten Singapore Rock climbing fan suddenly could not jump, get up from squats Experts say the surge is driven by a mix of factors such as poor sex education, unprotected sex among those who meet through dating apps, persistent stigma and cultural shame. The country's conservative, predominantly Christian culture has also made open discussions about sex and HIV difficult, even within families. The Department of Health (DOH) now records 57 new HIV cases daily, when the country recorded just six new infections a day in 2010 . Most of the new cases are still tallied among males having sex with males, similar to previous years. DOH estimates there are about 100,550 unreported people living with HIV (PLHIV). 'What bothers me is the shift in age group. A decade ago, most new cases were aged 25 to 34. Now, almost 50 per cent are aged 15 to 24. That to me is the alarming part,' said Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa. The youngest diagnosed this year was a 12-year-old child in the island province of Palawan, which Dr Herbosa believes was a case of sexual abuse. He said the country's growing HIV incidence among minors may be linked to grooming and exploitation, including by foreign sex offenders targeting impoverished areas. He said many young Filipinos now have wider access to pornography and engage in sex with multiple partners, yet remain unaware of how sexually transmitted diseases like HIV are transmitted. He added that most were born after the height of the Aids crisis in the 1980s and lack a full understanding of the virus' dangers. 'There are spas that operate like brothels. There is anonymous, unprotected sex behaviour, and I discovered there are also orgies happening where people use drugs. If you put that all together with the lack of sex education and the internet, pornography, it all adds up,' said Dr Herbosa. To respond more aggressively, the DOH in June recommended that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr declare HIV a national public health emergency. Such a move would allow the government to bypass bureaucratic delays, unlock emergency funds more quickly, and coordinate HIV-related efforts across multiple agencies. Mr Marcos has yet to respond. 'We need a whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach, just like how we fought Covid-19,' said Dr Herbosa. Policy blind spots The Philippines in 2018 passed the HIV and Aids Policy Act, hailed as a milestone for enshrining access to testing and treatment as a human right. It also lowered the age of consent for HIV testing from 18 to 15, allowing adolescents to get tested without parental permission. The government has since expanded HIV services nationwide. Dozens of state-run social hygiene clinics now offer free testing, anti-retroviral treatment , counselling and education. The country also has a Reproductive Health Law mandating universal access to contraceptives at these clinics. A handful of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) like the LoveYourself group provide similar services, including free HIV self-test kits. Some of these NGOs, however, are still recovering from funding disruptions caused by US President Donald Trump's foreign aid freeze in early 2025. The move abruptly halted millions of dollars in American support for global health programmes, disrupting HIV prevention and outreach in countries like the Philippines that rely heavily on foreign assistance. But even when services are available, barriers remain. Minors who test positive can get treatment for free if they are able to provide a parent's health insurance details, since HIV/Aids treatment is covered by the government. 'They don't want their parents to find out, so they refuse treatment,' Dr Herbosa said. 'And then they come back to us three years later with advanced HIV or full-blown Aids.' Dr Herbosa said it is best that PLHIV take their anti-retroviral therapy medication as early as possible, as it suppresses the virus, reduces risk of transmission and allows those diagnosed to live long, healthy lives. The country's testing rates remain low. According to DOH data, only 59 per cent of key populations, including men who have sex with men, are getting tested. Of those who test positive, only 44 per cent are receiving treatment. Dr Herbosa also noted that many patients are being diagnosed late. Their CD4 counts, which measure immune system strength, are already low by the time they get tested, indicating they have been infected for months. He urged Filipinos to consider regular testing and to take advantage of free self-test kits and PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis , a medicine for HIV-negative individuals that reduces the risk of getting the disease. 'Abstinence if you're young. If you don't want abstinence, at least practise protection or know the status of the person you're going to have sex with. Use modern protection methods like PrEP,' he advised. Stigma and sex education gaps Many Filipinos are still afraid of being seen in state-run social hygiene clinics, while others do not know enough about HIV or how it spreads, said gender and sexual health physician Dean o Reyes . It is a paradox in the Philippines, where LGBTQIA+ celebrities are widely accepted in mainstream media, yet laws protecting their rights have yet to be passed by Congress. 'It's a classic Filipino thinking that, 'Gayness is something I tolerate. But if someone in my family is gay or is HIV-infected, it's an entirely different story.' So it's nuanced. It's the cultural and religious beliefs that put a stigma on HIV here,' he said. Sex education is still widely seen as taboo, even though the law has required it in public schools since 2017. Advocates say implementation has been patchy at best, with many schools skipping lessons due to pressure from religious groups which argue it would promote pre-marital sex among youth. A Bill filed earlier this year seeking to require private schools – many run by the Catholic Church – to institutionalise sex education also sparked controversy and was ultimately shelved. Dr Reyes said these policy gaps have left young Filipinos ashamed and ill-equipped to make informed decisions about sex and relationships. 'Studies show that a comprehensive sex education reduces HIV numbers. It allows them to understand when they're being groomed or when they're being abused. Overall, it makes them want to have less sex, which is counter to the claim of conservative groups,' he said. Stigma also persists among those already diagnosed. Dr Reyes said some patients ask for their HIV medicine to be repackaged in vitamin bottles, so their families won't ask questions. It is something Mr Galade has experienced at first hand. He considers himself lucky that his relatives accepted his diagnosis, but he still had to explain how HIV is and is not transmitted. ' Some of their actions are bordering on ignorance. They still don't like it if I grab food straight from the serving bowl,' he said. 'They prefer that I have my own utensils and don't share. But I understand, because acceptance is step by step here.' Based on his latest blood test in January 2025 , Mr Galade's HIV viral load is now undetectable, which means he can no longer transmit the virus through sex. Still, he said dating remains difficult. Conversations often fizzle out once he discloses his status. 'So the stigma is still there,' he said. Hope on the horizon Despite these setbacks, advocates are pushing forward. Filipino public figures such as Miss Universe winners Pia Wurtzbach and Catriona Gray continue to promote HIV awareness. In 2024, drag queen Myx Chanel came out as a PLHIV on the hit reality TV show Drag Race Philippines, saying: 'I want to show the world how strong and beautiful people living with HIV can be.' Meanwhile, the DOH is working with the education department to launch a peer-to-peer counselling programme and update sex education materials in schools. It is also seeking to improve condom accessibility and scale up PrEP distribution. Dr Herbosa said government agencies are also exploring ways to strengthen family dynamics and instil core health values among Filipino youth, so they can make responsible choices when it comes to relationships and sex. For Mr Galade, being open about his condition is a form of self-acceptance and hope that Filipinos will become more understanding and be proactive in responding to the HIV crisis. 'You should not judge people just because of their status,' he said. 'Jesus told us to love our neighbour without condition, so why shouldn't you?'

Two Nipah virus cases detected in India; Three districts on alert
Two Nipah virus cases detected in India; Three districts on alert

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

Two Nipah virus cases detected in India; Three districts on alert

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The Nipah virus is a zoonotic disease spread by contact with infected animals, such as fruit bats and pigs. NEW DEHLI - Kerala has reported two confirmed cases of Nipah virus – one from the Malappuram district and the other from the Palakkad district. The first case is that of a 38-year-old woman, who tested positive for the virus at the Pune Virology Lab. Over 100 people on the patient's contact list are under the high-risk category. The woman is currently undergoing treatment at a private hospital in Perinthalmanna. She sought treatment at three different locations, including a clinic near her home, after experiencing fever 20 days ago. The second case is that of a child, who recently died. The postmortem report revealed that the child was infected with Nipah virus. An alert has been issued in three districts- Kozhikode, Malappuram, and Palakkad. District Collectors have been instructed to make necessary arrangements for declaring containment zones if required. Helplines at both state and district levels are being activated. THE STATESMAN/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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