PATIENT SATISFACTION IMPROVES, CONCERNS REMAIN ABOUT COSTS

The 2018 figure was announced by the Health Ministry in coordination with Vietnam-initiative (VNI) at a workshop on May 30.

Director of the Medical Services Administration (MSA) under the Ministry of Health Luong Ngoc Khue said the PSI 2018 was based on a survey of more than 7,500 in-patients and their caregivers at 60 hospitals in 23 provinces and cities.

Among the hospitals, 13 were rated as very good (21.7 percent), 26 were rated as good (43.3 percent) and the remaining 21 were rated fair (35 percent).

The 2018 PSI was the joint work of the Health Ministry, the VNI, and the Indiana University of the US under the “Equitable Healthcare through PSI” funded by Oxfam Vietnam and the embassies of Belgium and the Netherlands in Vietnam.

Hospitals have conducted surveys on patient satisfaction since 2015 among both in-patients and out-patients who are receiving treatment. However, the PSI survey focuses on inpatients who have been released from hospital.

Deputy Health Minister Nguyen Ngoc Tien said the survey aimed to determine the needs of patients and shortcomings in the country’s healthcare system. The lessons learnt from the survey will help the health sector and hospitals improve their check-up and examination services.

WATER MANAGEMENT BECOMING CRUCIALLY IMPORTANT

Improved water management can help Viet Nam tackle the threat of climate change, according to Belgium Ambassador Paul Jansen during a workshop held yesterday in Hà Nội.

At the workshop, entitled Water Management in Urban Areas in Việt Nam in the Context of Climate Change, policymakers, universities, research institutions, international development partners and private firms shared knowledge and expertise in the field.

“Urban resilience has always been a key issue in the developing areas of Việt Nam. And now, with the growing threat from climate change, improvements to the urban infrastructure are becoming increasingly more important,” Jansen said.

Việt Nam is one of the countries most affected by climate change, which also influences the interplay between water and urban areas and intensifies the risks of both drought and flooding, according to experts.

In Việt Nam’s rapidly expanding cities, increased development and increased rainfall due to climate change have created significant flood risks, impacting human lives and the economy and creating environmental problems.

Analysis of climate change impact, consideration of increased risk and vulnerability as well as actions for capacity building, awareness raising and infrastructure works were discussed at the workshop.

Prof Phạm Quý Nhân, deputy head of the Natural Resources and Environment University, described the current reality of water usage in Việt Nam.

“At present, 60 per cent of the population rely on groundwater for their water supply while the groundwater resource has been heavily exploited in some areas”, said Nhân.

“The high extraction rates are causing a rapid lowering of the water levels in key areas around Hà Nội, HCM City and in the Central Highlands. The sustainability of these water sources is under serious threat”, he said.

“Groundwater is very vulnerable to pollution and has a very poor inventory and information system,” he added.

“Climate change will increase evaporation, reducing rainfall in the dry season above all river basins, causing irrigation water demand to increase,” Nhân said.

According to the professor, about 8.5 million urban citizens lack access to clean water while in rural areas, 41 million people do not have a supply that meets the Ministry of Health’s clean water standards.

Along with insufficient access to clean water, millions of people suffer regular and massive losses from natural disasters.

Việt Nam is one of the most natural disaster-prone countries in the world, with about half of the population living on the coast and more than 80 per cent at risk of direct impacts from natural hazards.

From 1997 to 2006, natural disasters caused more than 5,000 deaths, and destroyed more than 6,000 fishing boats, nearly 300,000 houses and 4 million hectares of paddy rice, with total damage in excess of VNĐ50 trillion (US$2.1 billion).

To prepare for and reduce impacts of climate changes, the country would need effective measures including national strategic plans, national policy framework, vulnerable community protection plans, sustainable water development and protection projects, and campaigns improving people’s awareness on water use, the professor said.

The workshop was held by the Embassy of Belgium, in collaboration with Việt Nam National University’s Institute of Vietnamese Studies and Development Science (IVIDES), the Belgian Development Agency (Enabel) and Belgian universities.

VNS

 

EU-VN GUIDE ON FTA AND IPA

Dear valued members and friends,

It is our pleasure to send you the links to the updated version of the Guide to the EU-Vietnam Trade and Investment Agreements, as revised by colleagues in HQ and EUD in 2019. Since the first version was prepared in 2016, it has proved to be a useful tool to promote the FTA benefits so please feel free to circulate as appropriate to your contacts.

Have a good reading!

Link EUD website: https://eeas.europa.eu/sites/eeas/files/eu_fta_guide_final.pdf

Link DG TRADE: http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2016/june/tradoc_154622.pdf

A PROPOSAL FOR DIRECT DIALOGUES TO SOLVE BUSINESS DIFFICULTIES FOR INVESTORS IN HO CHI MINH CITY

Dear Sir/Madam,

First of all, on behalf of the Investment and Trade Promotion Centre (ITPC), we would like to extend our warmest greetings to you.

Business to Government Dialogue System (hereafter referred to as the System) was founded in 2002 by HCMC People’s Committee, which ITPC has been in charge of as a Chief Executive. This System aims to promptly solve business difficulties related to administrative procedures for enterprises and investors in Ho Chi Minh City. The System has had 42 authority agencies participating and answering any issue for enterprises and investors through two (02) methods:

  1. Dialogue by the System website: https://doithoaidn.hochiminhcity.gov.vn/
  2. Dialogue by direct meetings

ITPC has organized 188 direct dialogue meetings so far; in which coordinated with trade promotion organizations and business associations in Ho Chi Minh City to hold more than 30 conferences, answering more than 784 questions from enterprises and foreign investors, disseminating new policies related to many areas such as taxation, customs, social insurance, labor, wage, construction, information technology, investment and real estate.

In order to provide timely assistance to investors during the course of production and business activities in Ho Chi Minh City, ITPC is willing to cooperate with your organization to hold direct dialogues among government agencies and your enterprise members in every field.

For more details, please contact:

Investment and Trade Promotion Centre (ITPC)

Investment Promotion Division

Address: 51 Dinh Tien Hoang Street, Da Kao Ward, District 1, HCMC

Tel: +84 (28) 3911 1314

Ms. Minh Ngọc: +84 909 212 775; Email: ngocntm@itpc.gov.vn

View the letter here

DOCUMENTARY FILM FEST CELEBRATES 10TH YEAR

Vietnamese award-winning documentary Remember: You Are Alive will open the 10th European – Vietnamese Documentary Film Festival on May 31 in Hà Nội and HCM City.

Directed by Đoàn Hồng Lê, the film won the Goldern Kite Award in 2018 from the Việt Nam Cinema Association for best documentary and best documentary director .

The 27-minute film tells the story of an anonymous rural girl who chooses the right attitude to face the tragedy in her life — cancer. It is a story about love, life and death.

Phạm Thị Huế from Quỳnh Hải Commune in the northern province of Thái Bình discovered she had liver cancer when she was just 16. Her doctor said she had about six months to live, but she managed to fight the disease and lived for another seven years.

During the time she was also awarded a college degree.

The film also focuses on Huế’s role in the play Memento Mori — an art community project. The play was performed by cancer patients.

Huế died on April 2 a few days before the film was awarded the Golden Kite Award this year.

The film will be screened at 7pm in Vietnamese with English subtitles at the National Documentary and Scientific Film Studio, 465 Hoàng Hoa Thám Street, Hà Nội, and Hoa Sen University, 8 Nguyễn Văn Tráng, District 1, HCM City.

The 10th Film Festival was a milestone on the long journey of co-operation between the European Union National Institute for Culture (EUNIC) and Việt Nam, according to Trịnh Quang Tùng, deputy director of the National Documentary and Scientific Film Studio.

“The festival has gained a foothold with audiences thanks to the high number of quality movies we screen,” Tùng said.

Screening at the opening will also be a Wallonie Brussels film entitled So Help Me God. It is the first feature film based on Strip Tease, a television show from Belgium. For three years, the directors followed judge Anne Gruwez in Brussels during criminal investigations, hearings and visits to crime scenes.

Directed by Jean Libon & Yves Hinant, the film won the Cesar Award and Magritte Award for best documentary.

The 99-minute screening will begin at 7.40pm with Vietnamese subtitles.

The festival will be held from May 31 to June 9 with participants from France, Germany, Britain, Wallonie Bruxelles, Israel, Czech Republic, Sweden, Spain, Denmark and Australia.

Nine other films by Việt Nam Television will also be screened.

Vietnamese filmmakers are trying to exploit the material-rich language of documentary cinema to truly reflect life and human beings.

Also within the framework of the festival, four films by Vietnamese independent filmmakers will be featured in a separate show on June 9