Showing posts with label child’s health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label child’s health. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2016

အားလံုးအတြက္ ပိုလီယိုကာကြယ္ေဆး တုိက္ေကၽြးျခင္း

မာရီယာနာပါလာဗရာ ေရးသားသည



ေမာင္းေတာ၊ ရခုိင္ - ကိုထြန္းေအးမွာ ဆယ္တန္းစာေမးပြဲက်ေသာ္လည္း စိတ္ဓာတ္မက်ခဲ့ေပ။ တျခား ေရြးခ်ယ္စရာ လမ္းရွိသည္ဟု အသက္ ၂၁ ႏွစ္အရြယ္ ကိုထြန္းေအးက ဆံုးျဖတ္လုိက္သည္။

“ဆယ္တန္းစာေမးပြဲကို မေျဖေသးဘဲ ခဏရပ္ထားဖုိ႔ ဆံုးျဖတ္လုိက္တယ္။ ဒီၾကားထဲမွာ တျခားသူေတြရဲ႕ က်န္းမာေရးအတြက္ ကူညီေပးခ်င္တယ္။ အဲဒီအခ်ိန္ကတည္းက ကၽြန္ေတာ္ ေမာင္းေတာေဆး႐ံုမွာ အလုပ္လုပ္ခဲ့တယ္။ လူနာဝင္ခြင့္နဲ႔ ေဆးထိုးျခင္း စီမံေရးကို ကူညီေပးတယ္။ ကၽြန္ေတာ့္ရြာမွာေတာ့ အနာေရာဂါ အေသးအဖြဲေတြနဲ႔ ဆရာဝန္ညႊန္ၾကားခ်က္မလုိတဲ့ ေဆးေတြအတြက္ ေဆာင္ရြက္ေပးတယ္။

ပိုလီယိုေဆးတုိက္ေကၽြးရန္ မရွမ္း၏အိမ္သို႔သြားေသာ ကိုထြန္းေအးကို ေတြ႕ရစဥ္။ 
©ယူနီဆက္ဖ္ျမန္မာ/၂၀၁၆/မာရီယာနာပါလာဗရာ 


Polio immunisation for all

By Mariana Palavra


Maungdaw, Rakhine- Htun Aye failed his matriculation exam but that didn’t demotivate him. The 21 year-old decided he would choose another way. “I decided to postpone the matriculation exam. In the meantime, I wanted to help other people, by improving their health and wellbeing”, he recalls.  “Since then, I have been working in Maungdaw township hospital, helping with the patient admission process and injections administration. Back at my village, I take care of small wounds and non-prescription medicines.”   

Htun Aye visited Ma Shan's house in the different phases of the polio campaign ©UNICEF Myanmar/2016/Mariana Palavra


Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Child-focused Township Profiles launched in Magway and Kayah

More than 200 township, district and state/region officials from a range of social sectors participated in two inception workshops in Magway and Loikaw on 20th and 26th May 2016, respectively. 

Chief Minister of Magway, Aung Moe Nyo greets UNICEF Chief of Field Services, Rajen Kumar Sharma

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Reaching the hard to reach - Fighting measles and rubella in Rakhine State

 
©UNICEF Myanmar/2015/Thiha Htun
Wading through streams carrying iceboxes containing measles and rubella vaccine, Ministry of Health staff make great efforts to reach the hard to reach
 By Virginia Henderson
 
Rakhine State, February 2015: Wading barefoot through streams, climbing over steep narrow hill paths, crossing wobbly log bridges and walking hours over parched dusty plains- teams from Myanmar’s Ministry of Health, UNICEF and WHO went to great lengths to reach children in out-of-the-way places around the country.
 
In tiny villages and large towns around the country, 12,000 vaccination teams were part of Myanmar’s largest ever public health intervention. The National Measles and Rubella (MR) vaccination campaign, aiming to reach more than 17 million children aged nine months to 15 years, covered nearly 65,000 villages and 45,000 schools over two-phases.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

The national Measles and Rubella campaign

The national Measles and Rubella campaign, which aimed to protect some 17 million children across Myanmar, was a tremendous success! The mobilisation of nurses, teachers and countless community leaders has resulted in an excellent coverage- around 95% nation-wide.

Even in areas of conflict and intercommunal tensions such as Rakhine and Kachin States, unprecedented engagement of health and education workers and community leaders helped to reach levels comparable to the national average.

Follow this link to discover some of the steps taken during Myanmar’s largest ever public health intervention.


Wednesday, July 24, 2013

‘Seven things this year’ encourages mothers of young children to practice key health interventions

© UNICEF Myanmar/2013/Wendy Myint-Myint Hla
Nan Klé Klé (far right), Leader of ‘Seven Things This Year’ Initiative in Taung Tan Su Ward of Hpa-an Township and her seven-member core group with the wife of village Ward (far left)
by Wendy Myint-Myint Hla
Hpa-an, Kayin State, 24 July 2013 – “I now wash my hands with soap before eating” says Nan Klé Klé, 27 years old, a leader of ‘Seven Things This Year’ Initiative of Taung Tan Su Ward in Hpa-an Township.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

UNICEF-supported community volunteer training and prevention activities help control malaria in high risk areas

© UNICEF Myanmar/2011/Thet Wai Hlaing
Lwe Zar Thin working on her malaria prevention plan

By Dr. Thet Wai Hlaing

Kyaikhto Township, Mon State, Myanmar, 19 June 2013: Lwe Zar Thin, 45, is one of the health volunteers who received five-day intensive training on prevention and treatment of malaria in Thit Seint Kone village, which used be to a malaria high risk area in Mon State.

Lwe Zar Thin is a mother of two children, has long experience as an auxiliary midwife since 1989. She lives and works in the Thit Seint Kone village, with 58 households and 287 villagers. The village was infamous in Mon state for its high prevalence, high risk malaria status with an 1a ranking according to malaria micro-stratification.
  
She is happy that her work is contributing to fighting and reducing malaria deaths and malaria risk status in her village has improved from high to low. Malaria micro-stratification report 2013 declares Thit Seint Kone village as a malaria death free village.

“I had a five-day community volunteer training on how to prevent and treat malaria; I also received three days’ refresher training course three months later,” Lwe Zar Thin said.
Following the training, in October 2011, she committed to work as a volunteer to fight against malaria in her community. Now there are 25 malaria volunteers working in the village.

“All 25 volunteers from Thit Seint Kone village joined this five day training, which gave them a grasp of effectively prevention of malaria outbreak in high risk areas,” said Dr. Thet Wai Hlaing, Regional Programme Officer from UNICEF office in Mawlamyaing, the capital of Mon State.
Majority of villagers are living on rubber plantation, or in growing ground nut, sesame and paddy. Some work in the Myawaddy Trading Zone along Myanmar-Thai border or in the gold mines in the nearby areas. 
Midwives make monthly supervisory visits to support trained volunteers. Township and state level officials also make quarterly visits to the villages to monitor, support and improve malaria prevention activities as necessarily.
Every febrile case from her village consults Lwe Zar, and she helps them get malaria test and appropriate treatment.  On an average she handles 10 to15 malaria patients every month. “We are use rapid diagnostic test kits and anti-malaria drugs,” said Lwe Zar Thin.
Every month she finds at least one to three malaria parasite cases from those who are working in the gold mines and migrant workers working along Thai-Myanmar border. “Fortunately, the number of malaria cases in my village is dropping,” added Lwe Zar, “In spite of my years of experience as auxiliary midwife, I gained knowledge and confidence in dealing with malaria patients after receiving the UNICEF-supported intensive training and having worked as a malaria volunteer.”
 
She feels that people in her village rely on her and appreciate her help. This job is not for generating a big income, but she feels much passionate for the work she is doing.
 
Malaria is one of the four major diseases responsible for under-5 child mortality in Myanmar. Some 284 out of 330 townships in Myanmar are malaria endemic and about 60 per cent of malaria cases are reported from forest areas.

Friday, June 14, 2013

The State of the World’s Children 2013 report launched in Yangon’s Aung San Stadium with sports and joyous participation of a hundred children

 
Including children with disabilities not only benefit them but enriches everyone in the society
 
By Zafrin Chowdhury

YANGON, Myanmar 14 JUNE 2013 – UNICEF’s global flagship report State of the World’s Children 2013 on children with disabilities was launched in Aung San Stadium today amidst joyous participation of a hundred children along with distinguished speakers and advocates calling for equitable rights and opportunities for children with disabilities.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Upcoming Myanmar National Launch of the State of the World’s Children Report

UNICEF Myanmar is pleased to announce the national launch of UNICEF’s global annual flagship publication the State of the World’s Children 2013 Report this week in the Aung San Stadium.

Friday, November 23, 2012

UNICEF scales-up response, calls for stronger combat against child malnutrition in Rakhine State

Rakhine State, MYANMAR, 23 November 2012 - While precise information about nutrition levels in Myanmar’s Rakhine State is still difficult to obtain, UNICEF is very concerned about the extent and severity of child malnutrition, which has been exacerbated by the ongoing conflict.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Nearly 3,000 children below three years of age receive UNICEF-supported Micronutrient Sprinkles in Myanmar’s Thabaung Township

Zee Phyu Kwin village tract, Thabaung township, Ayeyarwaddy Region, September 15, 2012: Than Than Myint, mother of 18-month old boy Lin Lin Tun became convinced of the benefits of micronutrient sprinkles as she saw its effects on her child’s health after he received it as the supplement in May and June 2012.

Baby Lin Lin was sick and had to be hospitalized in the Pathein Township only nine days after he was born with frequent diarrhoea and skin disease.