Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Booklet confronts discrimination against children with HIV

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Half a million copies of a booklet intended to help lower the incidence of AIDS and combat discrimination against children with the disease will be distributed to schools and the broader community.

The publication, titled Facts on Children and HIV/AIDS was publicly launched on Monday in Hanoi. It has been sponsored by the United Nations Fund for Children (UNICEF).

It was drafted by experts from the Ministry of Education and Training (MoET), the Women's Union and the Ministry of Labor, War Invalids and Social Affairs (MoLISA).

It provides information in simple language and format to address commonly held misconceptions about HIV, which have led to discrimination of children, and adults, infected with it.

These include the belief held by many that all HIV-positive mothers give birth to HIV-positive children. However, the rate of transmission is only about two to eight per cent if the mother uses anti-retroviral medicine (ARV) before and after giving birth.

The booklet points out that with adequate health-care, children with HIV can study and live normal lives.

"We hope the book will soon become the gold standard for preventing the stigmatization of children with HIV," said Eamonn Murphy, UNAIDS representative in Vietnam .

Nguyen Trong An, deputy director of the Child Protection and Care Department under MoLISA, said discrimination against HIV children was pervasive.

He said the booklet should provide teachers with factual information on HIV/AIDS so that teachers and others can deal effectively with questions and inquiries.

Murphy, however, said that the booklet itself would not make a difference. "We strongly believe how it will be used matters," he said.

He suggested it be used to help discussions in schools and in the community to address gaps in the knowledge about the disease.

Ngu Duy Anh, director of the Department of Students' Affairs under MoET, said that he expected more booklets may be printed so that every teacher can have one.

Le Thi Luong (not her real name), aged 12, from Hai Phong City, received HIV from her mother. However, she has finished primary school and is entering sixth grade next month at Le Chan Secondary School in the city.

The smiling girl said she had many friends in her class.

"My best friends, Mai, Khanh and Hang, and I often go to school together," she said. "We have also been playing together since we were in grade two."

A teacher at Le Chan Secondary School, said Phuong Anh was not the only HIV-affected child to study at the school.

"School managers and teachers did not hesitate to receive her into our family," she said.

This is because the school had been active in providing every teacher and student with information on HIV/AIDS.

"I think education on this issue is important. Every child should have the right to access education regardless of their health status. This book will be a significant part of that effort," Nghia said.

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Booklet hopes to confront AIDS discrimination against children

Half a million copies of a booklet intended to help lower the incidence of AIDS and combat discrimination against children with the disease will be distributed to schools and the broader community.

The publication, titled Facts on Children and HIV/AIDS was publicly launched on August 23 in Hanoi . It has been sponsored by the United Nations Fund for Children (UNICEF).

It was drafted by experts from the Ministry of Education and Training (MoET), the Women's Union and the Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs (MoLISA).

It provides information in simple language and format to address commonly held misconceptions about HIV, which have led to discrimination of children, and adults, infected with it.

These include the belief held by many that all HIV-positive mothers give birth to HIV-positive children. However, the rate of transmission is only about two to eight per cent if the mother uses anti-retroviral medicine (ARV) before and after giving birth.

The booklet points out that with adequate health-care, children with HIV can study and live normal lives.

"We hope the book will soon become the gold standard for preventing the stigmatisation of children with HIV," said Eamonn Murphy, UNAIDS representative in Vietnam .

Nguyen Trong An, deputy director of the Child Protection and Care Department under MoLISA, said discrimination against HIV children was pervasive.

He said the booklet should provide teachers with factual information on HIV/AIDS so that teachers and others can deal effectively with questions and inquiries.

Murphy, however, said that the booklet itself would not make a difference. "We strongly believe how it will be used matters," he said.

He suggested it be used to help discussions in schools and in the community to address gaps in the knowledge about the disease.

Ngu Duy Anh, director of the Department of Students' Affairs under MoET, said that he expected more booklets may be printed so that every teacher can have one.

Le Thi Luong (not her real name), aged 12, from Hai Phong City , received HIV from her mother. However, she has finished primary school and is entering sixth grade next month at Le Chan Secondary School in the city.

The smiling girl said she had many friends in her class.

"My best friends, Mai, Khanh and Hang, and I often go to school together," she said. "We have also been playing together since we were in grade two."

A teacher at Le Chan Secondary Highs, said Phuong Anh was not the only HIV-affected child to study at the school.

"School managers and teachers did not hesitate to receive her into our family," she said.

This is because the school had been active in providing every teacher and student with information on HIV/AIDS.

"I think education on this issue is important. Every child should have the right to access education regardless of their health status. This book will be a significant part of that effort," Nghia said./.

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Foreign oil and gas firms help poor students

The National Fund for Vietnamese Children (NFVC) has signed an agreement with oil and gas firms from the US, Japan and Thailand to finance a 125,000 USD programme on education development in five southern provinces.

Under the agreement, Chevron Vietnam , a subsidiary of the US Chevron Group, the Mitsui Oil Exploration Co. Ltd of Japan and the PTT Exploration and Production Public Co. Ltd. of Thailand will provide 755 scholarships each worth 1.2 million VND to Vietnamese poor students. The three companies will also help upgrade some schools in the Mekong delta provinces of Ca Mau, Kien Giang, Hau Giang, Bac Lieu and Can Tho city.

Between Aug. 17-19, representatives of the three firms and the NFVC presented 280 scholarships to disadvantaged children in Kien Giang, Ca Mau and Can Tho.

Between 1994 and 2009, the NFVC mobilised funding from domestic and foreign organisations and agencies, providing over 30,000 scholarships worth more than 17.5 billion VND to poor students across the country./.

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New guide to historic game

Over 100 new solutions to the popular Vietnamese puzzle game Evereto – but now more often referred to by the name of the game's creator, Tri Uan, – have been published in time for the millennial anniversary of Hanoi, according to Uan's son, Nguyen Tri Hung.

The game helps sharpen powers of observation through the discovery of resemblances between geometric and natural forms, such as a face, a lotus, a horse, a bird and a heart.

Hung told the English-language daily Vietnam News that the new answer book guides players to form various figures from seven basic wooden pieces to resemble famous Hanoi landmarks such as the Tortoise Tower and the One-Pillar Pagoda.

The game has been popular since Uan created it in 1940.

According to Uan's daughter, Nguyen Bach Ngoc, her father took part in revolutionary activities from a very young age. He was arrested by French troops in May 1940 when he was 24 and exiled in the northern province of Phu Tho. With help from his comrades, he fled to nearby Hanoi and took part in the revolutionary underground.

Uan hid himself in a lumber room at a house at 42 Hue Street in Hanoi. His only source of entertainment was to cut cartons into pieces and make them into shapes.

"My father told me that he was an excellent student of math at the Buoi High School, so he wanted to make something out of what he had learned," said Ngoc. "After several days, he had cut seven pieces from an 8 by 10cm rectangle. From these pieces, he could shape thousands of natural forms. At that time, my father named the game Evereto."

Ngoc says that the game's name was changed to Tri Uan by President Ho Chi Minh, who said that the game contained Tri (intelligence) and Uan (mystery), making the creator's name well-suited to the game.

After the restoration of peace in Vietnam in 1954, President Ho and Party and Government leaders chose Tri Uan game sets as gifts for their international friends.

The palm-sized wooden game set can still be found at educational bookstores in Hanoi for 55,000 VND (2.80 USD) or from the creator's family at 129 Phung Hung street in Hanoi, by telephone at 0904277423 or by email to tringuyentrochoi@yahoo.com.vn./.

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Tien Thien Caodaism sect issues practice rules

Tien Thien Caodaism sect issues practice rules

The Tien Thien Caodaism Church has issued regulations guiding its religious practices from the central to grassroots levels, helping solidify unity in the sect during the 2005-2010 term.

The church reviewed its operation during its fourth congress in Tien Thuy commune, Chau Thanh district in the Mekong delta province of Ben Tre on August 23.

The congress was attended by 380 delegates who represented nearly 79,000 dignitaries and followers of the sect in 16 cities and provinces across the country and representatives from the Government’s Committee for Religious Affairs and relevant local agencies.

They heard that, the standing committee of the 2005-2010 term also issued a letter calling on all dignitaries and followers to join hands in strengthening the Tien Thien Caodaism Church and developing the sect further.

In the 2005-2010 term, followers and dignitaries of the Tien Thien sect contributed over 21 billion VND for charitable activities.

Huynh Van Bay was elected Head of the 15-member Standing Committee in the 2010-2015 term.

The Tien Thien Caodaism Church has instructed its followers to practise their faith in line with the Party and State’s religious policies and the rights to freedom of beliefs and religions of the people and encouraged them to actively participate in the nation’s patriotic and emulation movements as well as social and charitable activities in their communities./.

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Forum held on pandemic response

A veterinary staff sprays preventive medicine at Hong Thai Commune, Viet Yen District of Bac Giang Province. — VNA/VNS Photo Viet Yen

A veterinary staff sprays preventive medicine at Hong Thai Commune, Viet Yen District of Bac Giang Province. — VNA/VNS Photo Viet Yen

HCM CITY — The Vietnamese and US governments yesterday began a three-day workshop on pandemic planning, response and recovery in HCM City.

Funded by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the workshop is being held by the US Department of Defense's Centre for Excellence in Disaster Management and Humanitarian Assistance (COE-DMHA).

"This workshop is the first time that this civilian and military planning tool will be used and tested in Viet Nam," Andy Bates of COE-DMHA said.

The lessons learnt at the workshop could also be used to prepare for other types of infectious diseases that might affect Viet Nam and the region.

Some 100 representatives from around the country are attending the workshop in which the ministries of Defence and Health are actively involved.

The workshop, which aims to facilitate joint planning by provincial and national authorities, also seeks to improve the integration of the military into the Government's pandemic plans, including any possible third wave of the H1N1 virus that swept the globe beginning last year.

For the longer term, the workshop will examine how co-operation and co-ordination can help alleviate the economic hardship that communities face following a disaster.

It is part of a series that COE is executing in nearly a dozen Asian nations from 2010 to 2011 to bring international civilian training, planning, laboratory and containment standards to the region's militaries, many of which will be expected to respond to a deadly global pandemic.

This year COE has held workshops in Hawaii, Laos, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka and plans others in Cambodia, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Indonesia. — VNS

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Booklet hopes to confront AIDS discrimination against children

HA NOI — Half a million copies of a booklet intended to help lower the incidence of AIDS and combat discrimination against children with the disease will be distributed to schools and the broader community.

The publication, titled Facts on Children and HIV/AIDS was publicly launched yesterday in Ha Noi. It has been sponsored by the United Nations Fund for Children (UNICEF).

It was drafted by experts from the Ministry of Education and Training (MoET), the Women's Union and the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs (MoLISA).

It provides information in simple language and format to address commonly held misconceptions about HIV, which have led to discrimination of children, and adults, infected with it.

These include the belief held by many that all HIV-positive mothers give birth to HIV-positive children. However, the rate of transmission is only about two to eight per cent if the mother uses anti-retroviral medicine (ARV) before and after giving birth.

The booklet points out that with adequate health-care, children with HIV can study and live normal lives.

"We hope the book will soon become the gold standard for preventing the stigmatisation of children with HIV," said Eamonn Murphy, UNAIDS representative in Viet Nam.

Nguyen Trong An, deputy director of the Child Protection and Care Department under MoLISA, said discrimination against HIV children was pervasive.

He said the booklet should provide teachers with factual information on HIV/AIDS so that teachers and others can deal effectively with questions and inquiries.

Murphy, however, said that the booklet itself would not make a difference. "We strongly believe how it will be used matters," he said.

He suggested it be used to help discussions in schools and in the community to address gaps in the knowledge about the disease.

Ngu Duy Anh, director of the Department of Students' Affairs under MoET, said that he expected more booklets may be printed so that every teacher can have one.

Le Thi Luong (not her real name), aged 12, from Hai Phong City, received HIV from her mother. However, she has finished primary school and is entering sixth grade next month at Le Chan Secondary School in the city.

The smiling girl said she had many friends in her class.

"My best friends, Mai, Khanh and Hang, and I often go to school together," she said. "We have also been playing together since we were in grade two."

A teacher at Le Chan Secondary Highs, said Phuong Anh was not the only HIV-affected child to study at the school.

"School managers and teachers did not hesitate to receive her into our family," she said.

This is because the school had been active in providing every teacher and student with information on HIV/AIDS.

"I think education on this issue is important. Every child should have the right to access education regardless of their health status. This book will be a significant part of that effort," Nghia said. — VNS

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