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Serious Many Pappys don't like OngYK..not Team player.

OYK visited various healthcare-related places in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. :thumbsup:

Ong Ye Kung

17 November at 16:22 ·
Visited various healthcare-related places in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia today - the Ministry of Health, SEHA Virtual Hospital, Saudi Human Genome Program, Garage Accelerator, NEOM Health Sector office. A highlight was to bump into a Singaporean, Audrey Wu, who is attending a training programme at the Garage Accelerator.
The cooperation between Singapore and Saudi Arabia is broadening and deepening, especially as Saudi Arabia makes steady progress towards its 2030 social and economic vision.
On my way back home to Singapore now. It's not often that I'm going home to cooler weather.













 
from straitstimes.com:

HPB working with tech, healthcare partners to get Singaporeans active and healthy​

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Research has shown that people make incremental adjustments to their lifestyle choices if they get real-time feedback. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE
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Judith Tan
Correspondent
UPDATED

NOV 18, 2024, 03:15 PM

FacebookTelegram

SINGAPORE – Two pilot programmes will soon kick off to see if wearable trackers and other technology can give individuals real-time feedback they can use to improve their health.

The Health Promotion Board (HPB), which is working with technology and healthcare companies on the projects, said they could translate into real-world interventions to help at-risk individuals and those with chronic conditions delay the onset of diseases and better manage their health.

In the first programme called DigiCoach, up to 2,500 participants will wear a device that monitors their glucose levels continuously, giving them real-time information of how those change throughout the day with diet and physical activity.


DigiCoach will be conducted in partnership with American multinational medical devices and healthcare company Abbott, which manufactures the continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) device, and Health2Sync, a company that builds healthcare solutions to support those with pre-diabetes and high body mass index (BMI).

In the second programme, HPB will work with Google, Singapore-based health tech company ConnectedLife and Fullerton Health to manage high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol.

The HealthTrack SG project will pull together data of each of the 3,500 participants from various tracking apps into a single platform that health coaches at Fullerton Health can use for health counselling.


Research has shown that people will make incremental adjustments to their lifestyle choices if they get real-time feedback on how diet and physical activity affect their bodies.

HPB chief executive Tay Choon Hong said the board constantly pursues innovations that enable Singaporeans to better manage their own health.

“Our latest collaborations... will allow us to trial new solutions that deliver more timely and actionable recommendations to Singaporeans to prevent or manage chronic conditions. These solutions can be potentially scaled up in future to help more Singaporeans,” he said.

With these programmes in place, HPB will gain valuable insights on what works in encouraging Singaporeans to engage in healthy behaviour.


Governments and health authorities are turning to wearable technology coupled with artificial intelligence to see if this can improve preventive care for their populations.

A team from Alexandra Hospital is also carrying out a randomised controlled trial on whether using wearable fitness devices alone can change lifestyle habits, or if there is a need for a human health coach to offer the occasional nudge.

Called Activation, the pilot project looks at both wearable technology-based intervention and a health coach to increase physical activity and reduce sedentary behaviour among Singaporeans.

These trials come as the findings of the 2023 National Population Health Survey, announced in August, showed that more Singaporeans were getting active and adopting healthy lifestyle habits.
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In addition, the national preventive care programme, Healthier SG, seeks to make people more conscious of their own health and the agency they have to improve it.

At the 20th anniversary of the Singapore Population Health Studies on Nov 9, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said wearables and health applications have changed the way individuals monitor and shape their lifestyles.

He said that the Health Plan, which each individual has under Healthier SG, will be enhanced to become more personalised from the end of November.

“When you go to your HealthHub app, you are able to see your Health Plan if you have joined Healthier SG. These Health Plans will now become more personalised. For those enrolled in Healthier SG, your family doctor can provide more specific and practical diet and exercise recommendations during the consultation,” Mr Ong added.

Up to 6,000 Singaporeans will be enrolled in HPB’s pilot programmes. Recruitment for the DigiCoach programme started in July and the pilot will run for 10 months until April 2025.

Fullerton Health will start recruiting for the HealthTrack SG programme in the first half of 2025 and follow up with eligible patients for a year to monitor their lifestyle habits.

A participant of DigiCoach, Mr Victor Tan, 46, said the programme is like a friend, helping him form better habits.
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Mr Victor Tan, whose mother has diabetes, enrolled in the Digicoach programme to control his own glucose intake. PHOTO: SHIN MIN DAILY NEWS
The assistant vice-president in leadership and culture development with a security company believed he might be at risk of diabetes as his mother suffers from the condition, and he had tried different ways to keep his glucose level under control.

“I have greatly benefited from the real-time feedback as I could see (within minutes) how my blood sugar levels react to the food I have taken. From there, I can already make tweaks to my diet or increase my amount of exercise,” he said.

Through the pilots, HPB will study the effectiveness and feasibility of scaling up the innovations and programmes to benefit a wider population.
 
OYK sent off King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at the airport. :wink:

Ong Ye Kung

22h ·
Sent off King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at the airport this evening, as His Majesty concluded his state visit to Singapore. His visit underscored the very broad range of cooperation between two very like-minded, globally-connected countries. Joining us in the photo are our respective Ambassadors and their spouses, who have been working very hard to make this visit a true success. May the friendship between Singapore and Sweden continue to blossom and grow.

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OYK lost to an auntie. :rolleyes::eek::roflmao:

Ong Ye Kung

12h ·
At the Active Ageing Centre operated by Muhammadiyah Health and Day Care Centre at Yishun. As you can see, I was very close to winning but auntie across me beat me to it…

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OYK is trying to memorise all the notes on a guitar stem! :o-o::confused::roflmao:

Ong Ye Kung

Yesterday at 04:01 ·
I was in Saudi Arabia two weeks ago at the invitation of Health Minister His Excellency Fahad bin Abdurrahman Al-Jalajel. Over the last two days, he made a return visit to Singapore at my invitation.
We signed an MOU on health cooperation yesterday. Today, I invited him on a tour of Bukit Canberra, where health-related facilities such as Sembawang Polyclinic, ActiveSG gym, swimming pools and therapeutic gardens are co-located to promote all-round wellness.
We spoke about how we should always be learning something, to keep our minds and body active. His Excellency is renewing his pilot licences, while I am trying to memorise all the notes on a guitar stem!












 
OYK thanks all for their help. :smile:

Ong Ye Kung

30 November at 22:00 ·
With some of the volunteers who helped clear the clutter of a HDB unit today. Many are domestic workers from the Philippines, volunteering on their day off. Others were students and also members of the AMKSS Social Move, a charity started by alumni members of AMK Secondary School. Many thanks to all your help!

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OYK asks you to join the Young Otters. :cautious::eek::laugh:

Ong Ye Kung

1 December at 15:58 ·
Meet the Young Otters of Sembawang, registered for the 2025 Youth League!
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Want to join? Contact 80815589 for details!

 
OYK thanks VB. :rolleyes::barefoot::biggrin:

Ong Ye Kung

4 days ago ·
For one night every week, a group of doctors and Allied Health professionals from KK Women's and Children's Hospital, National University Hospital - NUH and SAF will go on international duty, to participate in virtual case conferences to help patients from Gaza.
They are part of a United Arab Emirates-led international medical specialist panel, specifically for patients with complex medical conditions.
Our public healthcare institutions are doing what they do best, offering their medical expertise to help patients in need. Thanks to Minister Vivian Balakrishnan, who conveyed the Government’s thanks to the team for their valuable participation.
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OYK asks you to choose fresh. :sneaky::devilish::roflmao:

Ong Ye Kung

5 days ago ·
Ultra-processed food may be convenient, but your health deserves better. Choose fresh, and feel the difference!
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✨


 
from straitstimes.com:

Tree of Hope: Campaign to raise funds for those with rare diseases​

With the theme of Wizard of Oz, this year’s campaign aims to “light up the Tree of Hope in the Land of Hope”.

With a "Wizard of Oz" theme, the 2024 campaign aims to “light up the Tree of Hope in the Land of Hope”.PHOTO: RARE DISEASE FUND/FACEBOOK
Judith Tan
UPDATED DEC 15, 2024, 09:52 PM

SINGAPORE – People with rare diseases often need expensive medicines to lead normal lives.

To help them, the Rare Disease Fund (RDF) has brought back its Tree of Hope fund-raiser for the second year. With the theme of “Wizard of Oz”, the 2024 campaign aims to “light up the Tree of Hope in the Land of Hope”.

The RDF is managed by the KKH Health Fund, which is part of the SingHealth Fund and is supported by the Ministry of Health.


From now till Dec 25, the public can support the Tree of Hope by donating at www.giving.sg/rare-disease-fund. Every dollar donated by the public will be matched with $3 by the Government.

Donors get a tax deduction of 2.5 times the donated amount.

About 3,000 people in Singapore have been diagnosed with rare diseases such as bile acid synthesis disorder, Gaucher disease and Pompe disease, and around 700 of them are children. Most cases are diagnosed in childhood and require lifelong medication.

Eleven Singaporeans – or about 0.37 per cent of the 3,000 patients – have received help from the RDF since it was started in 2019.

Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said in March that most patients with rare diseases are able to get financial help from schemes such as MediSave and MediShield Life, and subsidies. He said in a parliamentary response that those who struggle to pay their bills can also apply for MediFund through the public health institutions.

Only a small percentage of patients may need additional financial assistance, and the RDF was set up to support high-cost medication for this group, he added.

“Given the limited size of the RDF, funding support is focused on treatments for rare conditions that are life-threatening and where the treatment is effective in extending the patient’s lifespan,” he said.

Besides donating to the Tree of Hope, the public can show their support through tasks such as reposting content about the campaign on social media, taking part in the RDF’s social media activities that involve answering questions about rare diseases, and watching the stories of beneficiaries featured on the RDF’s social media channels (@rarediseasefundsingapore).

More information is also available at https://www.kkh.com.sg/giving/Documents/Rare-Disease-Fund/index.html
 
OYK paid a visit to Singapore General Hospital's new Emergency Medicine Building. :cool:

Ong Ye Kung

6h ·
Singapore General Hospital's new Emergency Medicine Building at Outram is progressively operational. I paid a visit today.
Two Acute Medical Wards (AMW) with a total of 84 beds have opened, and are almost fully occupied by patients who turned up at the Emergency Department (ED) and have been assessed to need immediate care, but are not critically ill. The idea is to treat them quickly, and hopefully they can be discharged in a few short days, without needing to be admitted to an acute hospital ward.
Pharmacy and Radiology services are up, as well as a 26-bed observation ward for ED patients who are awaiting admission.
All these are significant steps to reduce waiting times in the ED, and improve patient flow through the hospital. This keeps beds available for patients who truly need acute care.
When fully open in 2025, two more Acute Medical Wards will be opened, and the current SGH Emergency Department, together with ambulance bays and resuscitation facilities, will also shift over.
Looking forward to viewing the place again next year.















 
OYK gives an update. :cool:

Ong Ye Kung

20 December at 19:53 ·
After the COVID-19 pandemic, health authorities are paying far more attention to risk of the next pandemic. Our antennae are especially sensitive during the year end travel season.
Here’s an update on four blips on our radar screen currently, starting with the one with the highest risk.
First, H5N1. The US just announced its first severe case, an elderly patient, in Louisiana. Of the 61 cases reported in the US so far, most had direct contact with animals - birds, cattle - which suggests animal to human transmissions. What we are keenly watching out for are evidence of human to human transmissions. If that happens, it may mean that H5N1 has mutated and poses a pandemic risk.
Second, a mysterious disease in the Panzi district of the Democratic Republic of Congo. It was reported that 6% of patients, mostly children, died. It was also widely reported as Disease X, which unfortunately was an inappropriate use of the term in my view. The disease was not identified for some time, and this reinforces the need and value of investment in surveillance systems. That is why Singapore decided to donate surveillance equipment to the African CDC and is prepared to provide relevant training to healthcare personnel in Africa. The DRC health authorities have announced that the cases could be due to severe Malaria, coupled with malnutrition amongst children, which made it deadly. As malaria is common in that area, further tests are needed to exclude the possibility of other causative diseases.
Third, mpox clade 1. It continues to wreak havoc in certain parts of Africa. There have been sporadic imported cases in places like Thailand, UK, Europe and US. Most recently there was a cluster of four cases in Germany, where a traveller to Africa infected his family members. It will be a matter of time when Singapore experiences our first imported case and even first local infection. Fortunately, the experience in most countries, including African countries like Rwanda, is that most patients recover smoothly and it is not a very deadly disease.
Finally, COVID-19. Currently, the locally dominant one today is MV.1, a descendant of Omicron, and accounting for about 30% of local infections. What is significant is that there has been no year end wave as we expected. Our wastewater testing and random tests did not register an uptick, which means that this is not a matter of lack of reporting by patients. A possible reason is that over time, as more people get infected at different times, the infection waves become attenuated. Notwithstanding, some countries continue to experience waves, and MOH continues to watch out for emergence of COVID-19 infection waves because each time it happens, it increases patient load at our hospitals significantly.
Happy New Year!
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from straitstimes.com:

Singapore watching four diseases as part of pandemic preparedness: Ong Ye Kung​

Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung said health authorities are keeping a close watch during the year-end travel season.

Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung said the authorities are keeping a close watch during the year-end travel season.PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
Zhaki Abdullah
UPDATED DEC 23, 2024, 10:06 AM


SINGAPORE – The health authorities in Singapore are keeping watch on four diseases, including Covid-19, H5N1 and mpox, as part of efforts to prepare the Republic for another pandemic.

In posts on his Facebook and Instagram accounts on Dec 21, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said the health authorities are also keeping a close watch on developments in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where a mysterious disease has killed 6 per cent of patients, mostly children.

According to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 592 have been infected and at least 37 have died as a result of the disease.

“That is why Singapore decided to donate surveillance equipment to the African CDC, and is prepared to provide relevant training to healthcare personnel in Africa,” Mr Ong said.

He said Singapore’s antennae are especially sensitive during the year-end travel season, adding that H5N1 – otherwise known as avian influenza or bird flu – is posing the highest pandemic risk.

The United States had earlier this week reported its first severe case of the disease. A 65-year-old who had been in contact with an infected flock of birds in the state of Louisiana is in critical condition in hospital.


Of the 61 cases reported in the US so far, Mr Ong noted, most had direct contact with animals such as birds or cattle. It suggests the possibility of animal-to-human transmissions.

“What we are keenly watching out for is evidence of human-to-human transmissions. If that happens, it may mean that H5N1 has mutated and poses a pandemic risk,” he said.

Symptoms of H5N1 include high fever, sore throat and difficulty breathing.

As for the disease in the Panzi district of the DRC, Singapore’s Ministry of Health (MOH) said earlier in December that there is a low risk of it spreading to Singapore.

The health authorities in the DRC have announced that the cases could be due to severe malaria which became deadly when coupled with malnutrition among children.

“As malaria is common in that area, further tests are needed to exclude the possibility of other causative diseases,” said Mr Ong.

The third disease which the health authorities are watching is mpox clade I, which the minister said “continues to wreak havoc in certain parts of Africa”, with sporadic imported cases in other countries such as Thailand and Britain.

Earlier this week, reports emerged of a cluster of four cases in Germany after a traveller who had visited Africa infected his family members.

“It will be a matter of time when Singapore experiences our first imported case, and even first local infection,” said Mr Ong.

“Fortunately, the experience in most countries, including African countries like Rwanda, is that most patients recover smoothly and it is not a very deadly disease,” he added.

MOH had announced in September that vaccinations against mpox would be provided free to healthcare workers at highest risk of exposure to the disease, as well as close contacts of confirmed cases.

Mr Ong also gave an update on Singapore’s Covid-19 situation, with the current dominant strain being MV.1.

This descendant of the Omicron variant accounts for about 30 per cent of local infections here, he noted.

“What is significant is that there has been no year-end wave as we expected,” he said, adding that wastewater testing and random tests did not point to an increase in cases.

“A possible reason is that over time, as more people get infected at different times, the infection waves become attenuated,” Mr Ong said.

“Notwithstanding, some countries continue to experience waves, and MOH continues to watch out for emergence of Covid-19 infection waves because each time it happens, it increases patient load at our hospitals significantly.”

Updated versions of Covid-19 vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna were introduced here in October.

Telehealth lapses​

Separately, Mr Ong reiterated that despite lapses by some telehealth providers, there is no need for further regulations for the sector.

“We just need to make sure we are vigilant and take action when people breach these existing frameworks, so there is no need for new rules,” he told reporters on Dec 21.

MOH announced on Dec 20 that it had revoked the licence for MaNaDr Clinic, whose services included teleconsultations via a mobile app.

This was after the ministry assessed that the organisation had an “entrenched culture of disregard for the applicable ethical and clinical standards”.

MOH found that a large number of cases seen by MaNaDr Clinic involved very short teleconsultations. The shortest teleconsultation lasted just one second.

Mr Ong was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a year-end celebration for seniors in Sembawang, an event jointly organised by logistics company UPS, charity Blossom Seeds and the People’s Association.

Attended by more than 200 people, the event saw UPS present a donation of $11,000, raised by its employees, to Blossom Seeds to further its programmes for seniors.
 
from straitsrtimes.com:

Tree of Hope: Campaign to raise funds for those with rare diseases​

With the theme of Wizard of Oz, this year’s campaign aims to “light up the Tree of Hope in the Land of Hope”.

With a "Wizard of Oz" theme, the 2024 campaign aims to “light up the Tree of Hope in the Land of Hope”.PHOTO: RARE DISEASE FUND/FACEBOOK
Judith Tan
UPDATED DEC 15, 2024, 09:52 PM


SINGAPORE – People with rare diseases often need expensive medicines to lead normal lives.

To help them, the Rare Disease Fund (RDF) has brought back its Tree of Hope fund-raiser for the second year. With the theme of “Wizard of Oz”, the 2024 campaign aims to “light up the Tree of Hope in the Land of Hope”.

The RDF is managed by the KKH Health Fund, which is part of the SingHealth Fund and is supported by the Ministry of Health.

From now till Dec 25, the public can support the Tree of Hope by donating at www.giving.sg/rare-disease-fund. Every dollar donated by the public will be matched with $3 by the Government.

Donors get a tax deduction of 2.5 times the donated amount.

About 3,000 people in Singapore have been diagnosed with rare diseases such as bile acid synthesis disorder, Gaucher disease and Pompe disease, and around 700 of them are children. Most cases are diagnosed in childhood and require lifelong medication.

Eleven Singaporeans – or about 0.37 per cent of the 3,000 patients – have received help from the RDF since it was started in 2019.

Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said in March that most patients with rare diseases are able to get financial help from schemes such as MediSave and MediShield Life, and subsidies. He said in a parliamentary response that those who struggle to pay their bills can also apply for MediFund through the public health institutions.

Only a small percentage of patients may need additional financial assistance, and the RDF was set up to support high-cost medication for this group, he added.

“Given the limited size of the RDF, funding support is focused on treatments for rare conditions that are life-threatening and where the treatment is effective in extending the patient’s lifespan,” he said.

Besides donating to the Tree of Hope, the public can show their support through tasks such as reposting content about the campaign on social media, taking part in the RDF’s social media activities that involve answering questions about rare diseases, and watching the stories of beneficiaries featured on the RDF’s social media channels (@rarediseasefundsingapore).

More information is also available at https://www.kkh.com.sg/giving/Documents/Rare-Disease-Fund/index.html
 
OYK at the Singapore Science Centre. :wink:

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