link ae888

📝 OP-ED: UNFPA: upholding right of all to reach highest possible health standard

Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Dr. Natalia Kanem has written an article on the occasion of the World Health Day (April 7), in which she calls for joint efforts in upholding the right of all people to reach the highest possible standard of health.
📝 OP-ED: UNFPA: upholding right of all to reach highest possible health standard ảnh 1
Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Dr. Natalia Kanem (Photo: UNFPA Vietnam)

Hanoi (VNA) - Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Dr. Natalia Kanem has written an article on the occasion of the World Health Day (April 7), in which she calls for joint efforts in upholding the right of all people to reach the highest possible standard of health.

The following is the full text of the article.

"Every two minutes, a woman dies giving birth. As the clock counts down another year, 287,000 more women will meet the same tragic fate.

Most of these deaths are preventable. They are not inevitable. They happen because health-care systems routinely fail women and girls.

ꦅ Women die giving birth because, for too many, health services are unavailable, inaccessible, unaffordable or offer poor quality care.

📝 OP-ED: UNFPA: upholding right of all to reach highest possible health standard ảnh 2
Illustrative image (Source: UNFPA Vietnam)

Women seeking contraception face similar barriers. An estimated 257 million women who want to avoid pregnancy are not using safe and modern methods to do so.

This year’s World Health Day is a moment to join the global call of “health for all”.

For decades, health care systems around the world have made progress in improving the reach and quality of sexual and reproductive health care. UNFPA has supported that effort. The contraceptives UNFPA procured in 2021 alone helped to prevent 39,000 maternal deaths – contributing to a long and steady decline in the global number of women dying in childbirth.

Today, alarmingly, we see that global progress has stalled. In some places, maternal death rates are even increasing.

One reason may be that, particularly amid the COVID-19 pandemic, decisions were made to deprioritize and cut funds for essential, life-saving sexual and reproductive health services.

Gender discrimination often drives such decisions, treating the health and well-being of women and girls as less important than other goals.

As part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, countries around the world have committed to achieving universal health coverage and universal access to sexual and reproductive health.

Even so, in most countries, universal health coverage benefits packages exclude many essential sexual and reproductive health interventions, including measures related to reproductive cancers and gender-based violence prevention and response.

Around the world, UNFPA is supporting health systems to provide quality sexual and reproductive health services that reach every person and accommodate diverse population groups, including people with disabilities.

Investing in sexual and reproductive health is an essential investment in sustainable development and in delivering a world where every woman, girl and young person can live up to their full potential.

Such investments not only save and improve lives, they generate economic gains too: By UNFPA’s calculation, investing a single dollar in ending preventable maternal deaths and the unmet need for family planning by 2030 can yield economic benefits of up to $8.40 by 2050.

On this World Health Day, let us uphold the right of all people to reach the highest possible standard of health. Let us join forces to expand access to sexual and reproductive health, with rights and choices as the path to a more equal, prosperous and sustainable future."/.



VNA

See more

Assoc. Prof. Dr Nguyen Viet Nhung, Dean of Medicine at University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Vietnam National University (VNU) Hanoi, speaks online on Vietnam’s digital transformation strategy in medical education. (Photo: VNA)

൲ Forum spotlights AI and digital innovation in healthcare

To achieve its goal of becoming a developed nation by 2045, Vietnam is prioritising the integration of AI and digital tools into the training of future doctors, said Assoc. Prof. Dr. Nguyen Viet Nhung, Dean of Medicine at University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Vietnam National University (VNU) Hanoi.
A banner on the side of a car urges people to quit smoking for their own health and that of their loved ones (Photo: VNA)

♓ Sharp tobacco tax hike urged to safeguard youths, community health

A 2023 report by the Vietnam Health Economics Association estimated that the total cost of tobacco-related healthcare and economic losses reached 108 trillion VND (4.14 billion USD) annually – equivalent to 1.14% of GDP and five times higher than the budget revenue generated by the tobacco industry.
On the morning of May 26, 2025, following bilateral talks at the Presidential Palace, President Luong Cuong (first, right) and French President Emmanuel Macron (first, left) witness the exchange of cooperation documents between leaders of ministries, agencies, and enterprises from both countries. In the photo: Ngo Chi Dung, General Director and Chairman of the Board of Viet Nam Vaccine Company (VNVC) (second, right), and Zainab Sadat Qayyum, President of Sanofi Southeast Asia – India, exchange the cooperation agreement on the transfer of Sanofi’s vaccine production technology to VNVC’s vaccine and biologicals plant. (Photo: VNVC)

൲ Vietnam, France collaborate in vaccine production technology transfer

Under the agreement, VNVC and Sanofi will gradually implement technology transfers to enable domestic production of several key Sanofi vaccines that are widely used in Vietnam. In addition, Sanofi will support VNVC in training human resources and quality management in vaccine research and manufacturing.
{dagathomo tructiep hôm nay}|{link link link ae888}|{dá gà thomo}|{trực tiếp đá gà thomo hom nay}|{sbobet asian handicap}|