Showing posts with label Healthcare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Healthcare. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Vietnam - Government to give youth encephalitis booster shots

A doctor vaccinates a child against Japanese encephalitis in Quảng Trị Province’s Cát Village. The national immunisation programme, in 2017-2018, will give supplemental vaccinations against Japanese encephalitis to children between six and 15 years old.— VNA/VNS Photo Hồ Cầu

February, 25/2017

The national immunisation programme will give supplemental vaccinations against Japanese encephalitis to children between six and 15 years old, who did not receive the vaccine, or were not sure about their vaccination schedule previously, in districts facing high risks of the disease.

The plan will be carried out in 2017-18.

The information was released by associate professor Trần Như Dương, deputy director of the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology.

Dương said that Việt Nam saw about 1,000 cases of encephalitis per year, and 10 per cent of them were Japanese encephalitis.

Nearly 60 per cent of the cases were in northern provinces.

Most patients are between one and 10 years old and were unsure if they had received the vaccination or not.

Under the plan, children between six and 15 years old will receive three doses of the vaccine.

The plan will cover several districts in Sơn La, Điện Biên, Lạng Sơn and Bắc Kạn northern provinces, Quảng Trị, Thừa Thiên-Huế, Quảng Nam and Quảng Ngãi central provinces.

The districts had at least one problem related to the disease, including the rate of vaccination against Japanese encephalitis being under 80 per cent, the rate of Japanese encephalitis equal to or more than 1/100,000 residents, and fatalities caused by Japanese encephalitis in two consecutive years.

The national programme will provide vaccinations for about 3.4 million children, who are from one to two years old, per year nationwide.

Experts from the Preventive Medicines Department under the Ministry of Health said that Japanese encephalitis could occur year-round, and the epidemic often occurs in summer months, because mosquitoes can develop during those months.

Anyone who is not vaccinated can suffer from the disease.

Experts warned that to prevent the disease, people should ensure environmental hygiene, clean accommodation, use mosquito nets while sleeping and not let children go near animals.

Experts said that vaccinations were the most effective preventive measure.

But only one dose of the vaccine was not strong enough, so children should receive three basic doses. The first dose is when they are one year old, the second one or two weeks later, and the third one year later. Children should also receive booster injections every four years until they are 15 years old.


You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Thursday, November 3, 2016

Indonesia - Indonesia takes pains to stop excessive use of antibiotics

In developing countries, it is a problem decades old but the rising antimicrobial resistance in Indonesia has rarely been raised in a public awareness campaign — even though the government has quietly been putting in a great deal of effort to reverse the trend.

Few people may have even heard that the Health Ministry runs a task force called the Antimicrobial Resistance Control Committee, or KPRA. To support the antimicrobial resistance campaign, the task force has been commissioned to draft a national action plan.

The basic concern over antibiotic resistance is that it can reverse decades of advances in medicine, bringing the world back to an age before the discovery of antibiotics, in 1928, when millions of people died from infections that could have been prevented today.

In Indonesia, doctors now already have to prescribe new types of antibiotics or higher dosages of current medicines because the bacteria are getting stronger.

The action plan will dictate a nationwide effort to reduce the abuse of antibiotics in human, animals and plants, as the medicines are also often misused for treatment and prevention of diseases in livestock, aquaculture, as well as crop production.

 “If antibiotics are used on livestock, they will infect people who consume its products, such as meat and milk. This also applies to shrimp and fish. We also have to monitor antibiotics used on them,” KPRA head Harry Parathon said.

According to the Agriculture Ministry, unchecked use of antibiotics is also rampant among farmers without them knowing it. The chemicals are found in the animals’ drinking fluids and feed.

Andi Hendra Purnama, a ministry official in charge of monitoring animal feed, says some antibiotics are disguised as “feed additive” as stated in their labeling.

Harry warns that excessive use of antibiotics on livestock can also adversely affect plants.

“Let’s say I have a chicken farm and give antibiotics to all of my chickens. Their feces on the soil find their way into plants. As a result, the plants will absorb the antibiotics, creating a cycle.”

Hence the government will adopt the “One Health” concept in its action plan. Introduced in the early 2000s, the concept assumes that human and animal health are interdependent and bound to the health of the ecosystems in which they exist.

The KPRA expects it will take a long time to draft the national action plan because it is an interdepartmental undertaking that involves such institutions as the Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry and the Agriculture Ministry.

The committee also aims to tackle other major causes of the increasing antibiotic resistance in Indonesia, like public misperception on antibiotics, unrestrained doctors’ antibiotic prescriptions and easy access to antibiotics in the market.

A recent survey conducted by the Indonesian Caring Parents Foundation (YOP) with 92 doctors in Jakarta and 35 doctors in Papua found that 91 percent of the doctors always prescribe antibiotics to their patients, while 75 percent of them prescribe antibiotics for mild illnesses like the common cough and influenza.

According to the YOP survey, 85 percent of pharmacies in Jakarta sell antibiotics without prescriptions. What’s more, 83 percent of them recommend that customers buy antibiotics, even when people only ask for drugs for mild ailments, like the flu.

Research by the Health Ministry in 2013 showed that only 27 percent of doctors in Indonesia had given the right dose of antibiotics and prescribed them for the right purposes.

It also gave a glimpse of how easy it was to access antibiotics in Indonesia. The survey found that 10 percent of families had antibiotics in their homes and that at least 86 percent of those obtained the drug without a prescription.

It turns out that unnecessary antibiotics are not only prescribed by doctors who open their private services, but also by hospitals, as Harry has noted.

“Patients have already developed antibiotic resistance from home. Then they are given antibiotics again at the hospital. Instead of being killed, these bacteria grow stronger. This is called healthcare associate infection. So the infection happens at hospitals,” Harry said.

In response, Health Minister Nila F. Moeloek has called on doctors to exercise maximum care in prescribing antibiotics.

She specifically asked the Indonesian Doctors Association (IDI) to remind its members to not authorize the use of antibiotics unless it is really necessary.

IDI secretary-general Adib Khumaidi promises the association will take action against any of its members who go against the rule. “Disciplinary actions will be in the form of membership termination or suspension,” he says.

But IDI doctors have an excuse. Very often, doctors prescribe antibiotics on the patient’s demand although they know the medicines are unnecessary.

“Besides, patients sometimes buy antibiotics over the counter because they know the drugs. We have to stop it,” Adib says.

Even worse is the fact that many people also fail to take antibiotics in the right dosage or fail to get through their prescriptions.

“Once patients begin taking antibiotics, they can’t stop midway. They must finish their prescribed duration of taking the drug,” Adib says.

Aside from the national action plan, the ministry actually had issued a regulation in 2011, which serves as a general guideline on antibiotic use. Then last year, it launched a campaign called “GeMa CerMat”, aimed to encourage the public to wisely use antibiotics.

For a better grasp on this critical issue, the government is currently researching the level of antibiotic resistance in 18 hospitals in major cities of the country.

Currently, it is assessing how well hospitals have been implementing the antibiotic-resistant management program.

“If the prevalence of antibiotic resistance is high in a hospital, its use must be unrestrained. And that hospital might fail to get accreditation. So the assessment will become part of hospital accreditation,” Harry says.

Hans Nicholas Jong



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Indonesia - Govt woos specialists to work in regions

Bracing for a stream of foreign medical professionals entering the country after the implementation of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), the government is devising a set of incentives to encourage local specialists to work in the regions.

The Health Ministry hopes the incentives will lure surgeons, pediatricians, internists, obstetricians and anesthetists to areas in short supply of specialists for at least a year.

The plan also aims to keep local specialists competitive compared to the foreign doctors that will soon be allowed to move freely between countries in Southeast Asia.


The ministry’s Director General of Community Services, Bambang Wibowo, when opening the Indonesian Medical Council (KKI) national coordination meeting in Surabaya, East Java, said foreign doctors would make efforts to take over regions in Indonesia that have a shortage of doctors.

“The number of specialists is very limited in those regions, especially in the eastern part of Indonesia as well as in border regions and on islands. This requires awareness of the doctors that they are needed there,” said Bambang Wibowo in Surabaya on Tuesday.

Indonesia, according to Bambang, has become a lucrative market for players in the health service. Doctors are still in short supply at many of the country’s 9,754 community health centers (Puskesmas) and 2,573 hospitals. Moreover, the population of Indonesia is estimated to reach 270 million people in 2020, which would include a significant number of middle-income earners able to afford private health care.

The policy to assign specialists to areas that lack doctors for at least a year is backed up by an existing program to assign teams of newly-graduated physicians, dentists, midwives and health analysts to remote areas in a bid to cover the shortage of doctors in Indonesia.

Based on KKI data, Indonesia currently has 175,410 registered doctors, 31,414 of whom are specialists.

KKI chairman Bambang Supriyatno said synergy between all stakeholders was needed to address the issue.

“This month, we will discuss domestic regulations in response to the potential and threat of the influx of foreign doctors to Indonesia,” said Bambang.

At the same occasion, University of Defense professor Rear Admiral (ret.) Setyo Harnowo said Indonesia faced no obvious military threats from outside in the next 10 years, but it faced non-military ones instead.

“Indonesia is facing the threat of a proxy war, or a weakening of the nation using non-military means, such as economic and health threats, and the health threats must be faced by those in the health sector,” said Setyo.

Separately, House of Representatives Commission IX chairman Dede Yusuf Macan Effendi, who also spoke at the forum, said he was encouraging the Health Ministry and KKI to maintain an equal distribution of doctors across Indonesia.

The Democratic Party politician related his experience in meeting with the regent of Membramo in Papua, who he said was willing to provide Rp 50 million as “settling-down” cash, aside from regular income and other facilities, to specialists willing to serve in the regency.

“Seeing that the administration is willing to give Rp 50 million, imagine the desire of the regency to have specialists there,” said Dede.

Dede urged KKI to encourage the presence of medical schools in regions with a shortage of doctors, because doctors generally gathered in campuses with medical schools.

Wahyoe Boediwardhana



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Indonesia - Minister Nila to Investigate Fund Flows to Doctors

Health Minister Nila Djuwita F. Moeloek said that she had not received official reports about fund flows from pharmaceutical companies to doctors.

“I just found out about it from a running text,” Nila said at the Research and Technology and Higher Education Ministry’s office in Jakarta on Friday, September 16, 2016.

Nila explained that it would be irregular for doctors to receive money from pharmaceutical companies.

Earlier, Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) chairman Agus Rahardjo revealed an indication that a pharmaceutical company had sent money amounting up to Rp800 billion (US$61.5 million) to doctors over the last three years. The KPK received the report from the Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Center (PPATK).

According to Agus, the money was channeled by a pharmaceutical company. In addition, he said that the company was not a major one. He viewed that the report could not be used to describe the actual condition of the pharmaceutical industry.

Agus revealed that the company’s expense reflected the huge amount of money spent for health care services. Based on a research conducted by the KPK, Indonesia’s expenses for health care services accounted for 40 percent of the country’s total expenses, which were higher than those in other countries, such as Japan and Germany.The PPATK’s report was in line with Tempo magazine’s investigation into a graft allegation involving doctors and pharmaceutical companies. The investigation, conducted in 2015, revealed that about 2,000 doctors were involved in the practice.

The article also mentioned that the transaction value for medicines reached Rp69 trillion (US$5.3 billion) as pharmaceutical companies allegedly bribed doctors to put their products in prescriptions for patients.

The KPK and the Health Ministry worked together to make an agreement that strictly governed the practice of providing funds from pharmaceutical companies to doctors. Despite the regulation, Nila said that a doctor would be allowed to receive a gift from a pharmaceutical company if the aim was to improve the doctor’s competency or to conduct a research.



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Singapore - Prostate cancer screening better with new thinking

Although prostate cancer is one of the less lethal cancers, a wide range of treatments is available, and one patient's fight has strengthened his belief in a healthy lifestyle.

Screening for prostate cancer, the third most common cancer here among males, has undergone a change in thinking. Doctors are likely to recommend it mainly for those who are at higher risk instead of every male of a certain age, as used to be the case.

This is because the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test is prone to false positives, so about two-thirds of men who have raised levels of the protein in their blood actually do not have cancer, said Dr Ravindran Kanesvaran of the National Cancer Centre Singapore.

They end up undergoing unnecessary biopsies, which have their own risk, just to rule out cancer.

What is more, most men with prostate cancer will not die of it, as it tends to be slow-growing in many cases, said Dr Kanesvaran.

But once diagnosed, men might end up having unnecessary treatments such as surgery or radiation therapy, he said. Screening is best done on men who meet certain criteria, such as those between 50 and 75 years old, with a life expectancy of more than 10 years, and a strong family history of prostate cancer - first-degree relatives who were diagnosed before they turned 65.

The prostate gland, about the shape and size of a walnut, secretes fluids that help in reproduction.

Prostate cancer was the third most common cancer diagnosed in men between 2010 and 2014, with 3,694 new cases found in that time period. During that period, 739 men died of prostate cancer, making it the sixth most common cause of cancer death among men.

In the 1980s, the rate of metatstatic prostate cancer was 72.4 per cent, said Dr Sim Hong Gee, who is a senior consultant urologist of the Ravenna Urology Clinic at Gleneagles Medical Centre. Because of screening, most patients are now diagnosed at Stage 1 or 2, he said.

According to the National Registry of Diseases Office, only three in 10 prostate cancer patients were diagnosed at Stage 4. At the National University Health System, one- quarter are diagnosed at Stage 4.

In comparison, about 5 per cent of men in the United States are diagnosed at Stage 4, simply because they screen more, said Dr Lincoln Tan, consultant at the division of surgical oncology (urology), National University Cancer Institute, Singapore (NCIS). But, he added: "In the US, there is a lot of unnecessary treatment going on, it is just overdone."

A test with better accuracy may put the screening dilemma to rest. The NCIS is working on a new blood test for screening called the Prostate Health Index. From a study of 150 men, its accuracy appears to be three times higher than that of the PSA test, said Dr Tan. But it is more expensive - about $120 out of pocket, compared to $30 for the PSA test.

On the treatment front, with prostate cancer being so slow-growing, the NCIS has embarked on an active surveillance programme, in which prostate cancer patients are observed instead of treated right away. They have a PSA test every six months, and a biopsy every one to three years."The key benefit of being on this programme is that patients avoid the toxicity of treatments," said Dr Tan.

Nevertheless, some patients request immediate treatment rather than monitoring. The latest treatments include using radiation seeds implanted directly onto the prostate gland to target cancer cells more directly, and robotic surgery, which is highly precise, to remove the tumour. There is also hormonal therapy to reduce testosterone levels.

As for prevention, a diet rich in certain nutrients is advised."Males may want to include more lycopene in their diet, which is present in tomatoes. Also, cruciferous vegetables and green tea may help. But how far it prevents the cancer, we aren't really sure," said Dr Sim.
DR SIM HONG GEE, senior consultant urologist of the Ravenna Urology Clinic at Gleneagles Medical Centre, on preventing prostate cancer through diet.



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Cambodia - Six steps towards clean healthcare settings in Cambodia

Dirty sinks used for handwashing and cleaning medical equipment in one health centre in rural Cambodia.

Channa Sam Ol, WASH and Health Program Manager for WaterAid Cambodia, describes how the team is working to put water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) at the centre of improvements to healthcare facilities.

Ensuring healthcare facilities have clean water, accessible toilets and handwashing stations has huge benefits – and is the key focus of WaterAid's current campaign, Healthy Start. It prevents infections and the spread of disease; protects staff, patients, care-givers, pregnant women and newborns; and improves the experience of care. The 2015 World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF WASH in healthcare facilities report stated that just 67% of Cambodian healthcare facilities have water coverage, with no data reported for sanitation or water and soap coverage for effective handwashing.

At WaterAid Cambodia, we have been taking steps to address this urgent issue.

1 Identifying where there is a need

In 2014, we started work to help Cambodia meet its target of universal access to clean water and sanitation by 2025. We undertook a scoping exercise to identify the most strategic ways in which our expertise could support the country’s health priorities and bring WASH to the core of its health policies and programmes. We identified WASH in healthcare facilities as one of the priority areas.

2 Understanding the situation

To build a more detailed understanding of the status of WASH in healthcare facilities, we partnered with the National Institute of Public Health to review existing Ministry of Health data and identify the extent to which WASH in healthcare facilities is monitored nationally. The findings showed there is no single policy document that comprehensively explains standards and coverage targets for WASH in healthcare facilities in Cambodia.

Because of limited national policies, standards and monitoring, together with WHO we developed an assessment tool to capture data on WASH access and practices in healthcare facilities. Assessments were then successfully completed in 12 facilities (health centres and referral hospitals), collecting information on the main indicators of access to safe WASH in healthcare. The study highlighted that in most cases an improved water source was not available all year round. Instead, multiple sources were used, leading to a lack of drinking water. Typically, toilets were not functioning well, or were inaccessible to staff or patients with a disability, with limited mobility, or in the last trimester of pregnancy. None of the toilets had the features to support menstrual hygiene management.

Being in the maternal and child health field for more than ten years, I have seen with my own eyes a situation not so different from what the study found. There are a lot of challenges around the cleanliness of maternity wards: poor hand hygiene practices and facilities; a lack of clean water for newborn bathing; poor medical waste management (especially placenta disposal); and a lack of personal protection for staff. WaterAid’s studies showed that the status of WASH in healthcare facilities in Cambodia is not adequately captured in national monitoring mechanisms, and therefore nobody really knows the actual situation. This motivates me to work to address these challenges, especially to contribute to improving maternal and child mortality and morbidity, and to raise the profile of WASH and health within my country’s health system. In a discussion I had with a colleague from WHO in my first month at WaterAid, I remember asking, “How should we start?”

3 Identifying stakeholders and partners

To address the challenges, all stakeholders, including the government, development partners and local NGOs, need to understand the situation and take action. Through identifying others working on WASH in healthcare facilities in Cambodia, we learned that Emory University was already undertaking work that had similar goals to WaterAid’s. We began a partnership with Emory University under the project name Safe water: access to clean water in healthcare facilities. In late 2015, WaterAid Cambodia and key actors organised an informal consultation meeting to gather all interested partners to identify the challenges and opportunities and begin developing a plan for moving forward.

4 Taking formal steps

In order to make significant and sustainable improvements to WASH in healthcare facilities, we needed to build a strong relationship with government partners. We were delighted to secure a formal meeting with the Secretary of State for the Ministry of Health, His Excellency Professor Eng Huot. During the meeting, Prof Huot was presented with the clear message that WASH in healthcare facilities is part of basic quality of care and a fundamental part of infection prevention control. He not only agreed with its importance for improving health in Cambodia but reinforced it, stating, “Without water, the healthcare facilities can’t reach the infection prevention control standard.” This initial meeting led to an official memorandum of understanding between WaterAid Cambodia and the Ministry of Health, to implement a WASH and health project with WASH in healthcare facilities as the priority starting point.


A midwife washes her hands in a rural health centre in Pusat province.

5 Turning planning into action

With an official memorandum of understanding in hand, we began our project with the Ministry of Health’s Department of Hospital Services, together with WHO and other partners. Jointly, we organised a second consultation meeting, this time lead by the Department of Hospital Services and a representative from the Ministry of Rural Development’s Rural Health Care Department. NGOs who would be implementing the WASH in healthcare facilities programme also attended. The meeting concluded with three points to understand:

What is the basic WASH situation in healthcare facilities?
What are the training needs for healthcare staff on WASH within infection prevention control procedures?
How can we include sections on WASH in the existing policies, guidelines and standards related to healthcare facilities?

6 Institutionalising the WASH in healthcare facilities assessment tool

Building on our assessment tool and WHO’s Essential Environmental Health Standards in Health Care, the National Institute of Public Health developed a national assessment tool. The tool addresses both public referral hospitals and health centres. Its main objective is to guide and harmonise national assessment of WASH in public health facilities in Cambodia. More specifically, it is to be used to collect data to compute the five core indicators: 
  • Basic water supply facilities
  • Basic sanitation facilities
  • Basic hand hygiene facilities
  • Cleaning routines
  • Healthcare waste management

What next?

In our team, we are taking an ‘adaptive planning’ approach, to stop and think what to do next as we learn more and the situation changes.

The WASH in healthcare facilities programme is aligned with the Government’s new five-year strategy to improve access to equitable and quality health services. During a WASH in healthcare facilities event organised by WaterAid at the 69th World Health Assembly, a senior officer from the Ministry of Health of Cambodia gave his support to integrate WASH in healthcare facilities as part of the quality of care agenda. The Ministry of Health’s influential support clears a pathway for change for WASH in healthcare facilities. In a recent discussion on localising Sustainable Development Goal 3 ‘Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages’, it became apparent that two indicators on water and sanitation are being included, and we are working hard to have a third on handwashing added too.

In the coming months, we will assist the Ministry of Health to administer and institutionalise the national assessment tool within healthcare facilities. When the Ministry has collected data and identified healthcare facilities to prioritise, we intend to support provincial health departments to upgrade behaviours and facilities. We are considering piloting the WHO Water and Sanitation for Health Facility Improvement Tool (WASH FIT)1 approach for this.

It’s an exciting time to be working with healthcare facilities. As part of the decentralisation agenda, facilities are for the first time receiving grants directly from the Ministry of Economics and Finance, and there are financial incentives for them to improve their quality of care. If we can tie improvements to WASH to this agenda we may see real interest from healthcare facilities staff, and leverage this new funding.

We will continue to raise the profile of WASH in healthcare facilities through engaging stakeholders, being a supportive partner and monitoring progress. With our partners, we are helping to catalyse change and revolutionise rural health care in Cambodia.

Channa Sam Ol



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Cambodia - Building a medical system without a foundation?

Among Cambodia’s 11 registered medical schools, many lack basic resources for hands-on training – including cadavers. As a result, instructors, doctors and students worry about the future of the profession in a country already distrustful of its health care system

In 2014, the University of Health Sciences (UHS) – Cambodia’s leading public medical institution – was forced to stop using human cadavers for its medical training and substitute the corpses with live pigs.

The Kingdom has no law on the donation of corpses to science, and police feared the cadavers might have been murder victims.

The university only had four cadavers at the time, and they had begun to decay, says Dr Nhem Aklinn, the head of the UHS simulation lab. The formaldehyde they were using to preserve them was toxic, causing health problems among students and professors. The odor wasn’t helping, either.

So now, just once or twice a year, the Kingdom’s advanced medical students administer anaesthesia, perform surgery and try to control the bleeding on the pigs. If they wake up, the medical students have “done well” – although their long-term prognosis is unknown, Aklinn says. But for now, the pigs will have to do the trick.

It’s a gruesome illustration of the problems with Cambodia’s medical-training standards. Students and experts tell Post Weekend that it’s time the government take a closer look.


The UHS medical simulation lab has mannequins, but no cadavers. Athena Zelandonii

A lack of human resources

Under the Khmer Rouge regime, doctors were killed, hospitals shuttered and medicines banned. Cambodia began to rebuild its medical infrastructure in the 1990s.

But from the selection process for medical school to the curriculum itself, and from the qualifications of university faculty to the regulation of licensed doctors, Cambodia’s beleaguered health care system continues to struggle. And many don’t trust most of the country’s doctors, with those who can afford it, Prime Minister Hun Sen among them, choosing to seek medical care abroad.

“[Those measures] are 100 percent in question,” says Cambodian-American doctor Mengly Quach, a critic of the country’s health care. Without proper training, he says, “[the doctors] are kind of being licenced to kill”.

There are 11 medical schools nationwide – two public and nine private, according to Ministry of Education spokesman Ros Salin, and around 20,000 medical students in the Kingdom. Seven of the private schools have been founded in the past five years.

The private institutions tend to have more resources. The private school Post Weekend visited this week has its own teaching hospital and a few cadavers, though not enough to train all of its future doctors.

It is common practice to use animals for advanced medical training, but there is sometimes no substitute for human cadavers. Some pig tissue and organs are similar to those of humans: on a recent morning in the UHS lab, advanced surgical students practised coronary bypass surgery on pig hearts.

But experimenting with pigs can sometimes reach a dead end. “It would be better if we had fresh cadavers for training, Aklinn says. “When [the students] learn how to repair a knee joint, it’s difficult to learn without real cadavers.”

Mam Bunsocheat, the vice dean of the faculty of medicine at UHS, says that establishing a cadaver or organ donation law in Cambodia would be “controversial”, given Buddhist belief in reincarnation.


Advanced surgical students practice a coronary bypass on a pig’s heart. Athena Zelandonii

People are concerned about what could happen to them, or their relatives, in the next life. “Cambodians [believe] that if you… cut a body part, during reincarnation, [the person] will be missing a body part,” he explains.

UHS has mannequins in its simulation labs, and the school recently purchased a 3-D, digital human cadaver designed in the United States that cost about $150,000 to assist with training. (Instructors, in turn, still need to receive their own training on the 3-D cadaver.) The cadaver can turn 360 degrees, and students can cut into its tissue with a virtual knife.

But there’s not even enough space in its simulation labs for the 250 new students accepted to UHS each year.

Shrouded in criticism

The Ministry of Health has faced recent criticism over physicians’ ethics and qualifications. In August, Dr Beat Richner – the head of the Kantha Bopha foundation – issued an open letter requesting that the government develop an exam for doctors who work in private clinics, as well as to close the private practices of those who fail to pass that exam.

The letter was prompted by the hospitalisation of 447 severely ill children over the course of one weekend, with 146 of the most severe cases transferred to Kantha Bopha’s hospitals. Most of the kids were misdiagnosed, or had been treated incorrectly, Richner said.

Currently, there is no licencing exam for medical professionals in private or public practice. Physicians are required only to register with the Medical Council of Cambodia – the sector’s independent governing body – with a valid medical diploma and criminal clearance.

In July, there were 4,990 doctors registered with the council, up from just 2,472 in 2015. But trust remains a problem. “We all agree that the trust [of doctors] is quantitatively low,” says Chheng Kannarath, the council’s deputy secretary-general.

Kannarath says that the sharp increase in registration could be attributed to increasing awareness of regulations among doctors; the council has been conducting professional development workshops in the provinces.


UHS lab manager Nhem Aklinn says it lacks resources and funding. Athena Zelandonii

But – at least for now – the council can’t do much, even with registered doctors. Its complaint system is limited by a lack of resources for investigations. “So far, no doctor has been officially disciplined by the council,” Kannarath says. “But there are cases under investigation.”

Unlicenced practitioners still proliferate. After a 2014 HIV outbreak in Battambang’s Roka village caused by an unlicenced doctor using tainted needles, the government shuttered 1,368 unlicenced providers. But early this year, ministry estimates suggested that another 1,700 unlicensed clinics were still operating.

Basic training?

According to a 2014 report by the World Health Organization, Cambodia had a total of 18,596 health professionals in public clinics, with general medical practitioners accounting for about 2,000 of them. The number of health professionals is projected to swell to 31,978 by 2020.

Medical schools need more rigorous selection processes, says Quach, the Cambodian-American doctor. And the faculty, training and curriculum need to be reconsidered. Students often train unsupervised, Quach says.

That’s even if there is equipment available. Students Post Weekend spoke to say they often don’t receive hands-on training until their last few years of school, and there is usually not enough equipment in the simulation lab for all of the students.

Students also complain of the theory-heavy lectures they sit through.“We have more than 100 students per class,” says Phang Veng An, a second-year medical student at UHS. “We don’t have a lot of interaction between the students and the teachers.”

Older lecturers teach in French, while younger ones speak English. And Khmer is still used in the classroom. “Teachers don’t even understand what they are teaching,” An says.

At UHS, Bunsocheat and Aklinn both acknowledge that training hours and space are limited, often by funding. Advanced students only spend two hours in the lab per week, they say. And those are only the 180 students participating in an international pilot program each year.

Prior to the pilot program, no students received hands-on training until their fourth, fifth and sixth year, when they are sent to an outside hospital to train with “real patients.”


The simulation lab’s virtual cadaver cost around $150,000. Athena Zelandonii

Pou Vichet, a UHS medical student, says: “It’s a bit too late.”

“If we don’t even know how to take blood pressure or give injections, how will we be able to carry on our duties?” he asks. “We need to know what doctors do at a hospital. It’s not easy if you don’t see it.”

Dr Chap Modich, a doctor at Mercy Medical Center Cambodia, a private hospital, says they select two or three residents per year. Most of the time, hospital staff need to provide refreshers on the basics: anatomy and how to take down a patient’s medical history.

“Mostly, they don’t have any hands-on experience,” he says. “When students go to the hospitals, no doctor can monitor to make sure they’re doing the right thing.”

And those studying in public hospitals don’t have “enough equipment,” says Sopha Chum, executive director of the Health and Development Alliance, which seeks to improve access to quality care.

Private medical school students tend to fare better, Chum says, based on his observation. Classes are smaller, and the curriculum is malleable. “At the public school, it is difficult to update the curriculum,” he says.

The International University (IU) – a private institution – is a step ahead of other Cambodian medical schools, says Dr Ojano, its president.

Two hundred students are admitted annually to the medical faculty, its “most popular”, and IU – which has it’s own teaching hospital – recently passed the first step in an accreditation process for ASEAN medical schools.

“It’s not easy to run a hospital, but we can,” Ojano says. “It’s important to teach the medical students.”

But even IU has room for improvement. Their simulation labs reach all medical students, but the school only has eight cadavers – and they aren’t cutting it, says Vouch Phisith, IU’s deputy director for international affairs.

Without an established donation law, the bodies could also be ethically loaded. In 2012, the school requested special permission from the national and municipal police to use cadavers. The school routinely borrows bodies of the relatives of poor families and then returns them, along with the funds to cover their funerals.On Wednesday morning, at least one of the cadavers seen by Post Weekend looked fresh.

Building a solution

UHS student Veng An says “there are a lot of things to improve” at his medical school. The budget for public medical institutions is overseen by the Ministry of Health’s budget, according to the Education Ministry’s Salin. Officials at the Ministry of Health did not respond to repeated requests for comment for this story.

But Bunsocheat said the university had this year seen improvements in training, and there are hopes for a physical solution on the horizon.

“Our dream is to have our own university teaching hospital,” says Dr Sansothy Neth, another administrator at UHS. “We plan to review our curriculum and add more practice [time] for students.”

Neth says the government has purchased land to build the hospital, though he couldn’t confirm where, and officials are currently studying other models.

“We are also trying to find partners for funding,” he adds.

(Bunsocheat points out that if the training hospital were up and running, Cambodia could import cadavers.)

UHS has received some French support in medical training since 1996.

Julien Aron is a technical expert who advises the international pilot program, where students are able to get simulated clinical practice. He hopes the new, active methodology will bring about change. “There are still some old methods of teaching,” he says. “But UHS is willing to open the lab to all students in a year.”

But whether or not the introduction of simulation practice will help improve the quality of doctors in Cambodia remains to be seen. Vanna Chetra, 23, going into his sixth year of medical school, say he’s seen a difference from his earlier years, when he only learned from “books and lectures.” During a recent morning, he was doing clinical training with younger medical students.

“We are fighting hard to show [people] that we can do this – that we can do better,” he says.




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