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Vietnam successfully treats sickest COVID-19 patient

March 27, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Doctors in Vietnam have successfully treated and discharged from hospital the country’s most critical COVID-19 patient to date after 70 days of treatment.

The female patient, numbered 1,536, is a 79-year-old resident in District 5 in Ho Chi Minh City.

She had made her entry into Vietnam from the U.S. in the central Vietnamese city of Da Nang on January 13, before her COVID-19 testing result returned positive the next day.

The woman was then sent to the Da Nang Hospital for Lung Diseases, where her health conditions deteriorated shortly after that due to the cytokine storm complications that led to her lung consolidation.

She started losing appetite, building up fluid in her body, and suffering from exhaustion from January 25.

The patient needed the support of the ventilator and the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) from February 2.

Her medical record included 10-year diabetes and high blood pressure.

During her treatment at the Da Nang Hospital for Lung Diseases, the patient was constantly in critical condition, with a prognosis of death having been made for her.

She was also considered the most severe patient since the pathogen had first hit Vietnam in January 2020.

However, the team of 18 doctors, who shared four shifts a day, from six different hospitals in Da Nang did not give up on the patient.

Thanks to their efforts, the patient could be taken off ECMO machine from February 28 and no longer needed ventilator assistance later.

Her hemodynamic situation and other organ operations also gradually stabilized.

The patient then received nutritional care and rehabilitation.

As her test results recently returned negative for the coronavirus, the Da Nang Hospital for Lung Diseases’ director Le Thanh Phuc announced her full recovery from COVID-19 and discharge from the hospital on Saturday morning.

She is expected to be transferred to Cho Ray Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City by Saturday night for the treatment of her underlying conditions of diabetes and high blood pressure as per her family’s request.

The recovery of patient No. 1,536 is considered as a great success of the Vietnamese medical sector.

Before patient 1,536, doctors in Vietnam had also successfully treated several serious COVID-19 cases, including a 43-year-old British pilot , who caught the virus in Ho Chi Minh City in March 2020, and the country’s oldest patient — an 88-year-old woman.

Vietnam has recorded a total of 2,586 COVID-19 cases, with 2,265 recoveries and 35 virus-related deaths as of Saturday afternoon, according to the Ministry of Health’s data.

The majority of the deceased patients had severe pre-existing illnesses.

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Volunteers receive second shots of Nano Covax in second-stage of human trials

March 25, 2021 by vov.vn

Ahead of the trials, all subjects had their health checked thoroughly before they were injected with the vaccine.

The second stage has been underway since February 26 and is being conducted by the university and the Ho Chi Minh City-based Pasteur Institute. Trials are being carried out at the university in Hanoi along with the medical centre of Ben Luc district in the southern province of Long An, with the participation of 560 volunteers aged between 18 and 60.

As part of the tests, volunteers were divided into four groups, with 80 people injected with a placebo whilst three other groups were administered with 25mcg, 50mcg, and 75mcg doses.

Among the subjects are 105 people aged over 60, with the eldest being 76 years old. Some volunteers also have some underlying health conditions which are not serious, such as high blood pressure, blood lipid disorders, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases.

According to Chu Van Men, director of the Military Medical University’s Centre for Clinical Trials and Bioequivalence, the majority of the subjects remain in a stable condition after vaccination. Only a few recorded mild pain around the injection site and a fever that disappeared after only one to two days.

He added that the initial assessment indicates that the Navo Covax vaccine is “relatively safe” for volunteers.

The third phase of human trials is anticipated to cover between 10,000 and 15,000 people both locally and abroad. Providing that the results are positive, the nation will then administer the vaccine to the public in early 2022.

Furthermore, roughly 7,000 medical workers in Hanoi have received the Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine since March 8.

Among those who have been vaccinated people, 33.21% of them have displayed normal side-effects. A total of 12 cases, accounting for 0.17% of subjects, experienced anaphylaxis, a reaction caused by severe allergy, of level one to three after vaccination, according to Chu Xuan Dung, vice chairman of Hanoi People’s Committee. Despite this, these cases remain in a stable condition, he added.

At present over 40,000 medical workers nationwide have been injected with the COVID-19 vaccine.

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Bombarded Saigonese yearn to consign the din to the bin

March 26, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

Nguyen Thi Huong was rudely woken up at around midnight by ear-splitting sounds.

The din emanated from a nearby pub in Saigon’s Binh Tan District on a Friday. She tried to rest again after wearing earplugs, but sleep eluded her until after 3 a.m., when the pub closed.

“I cannot watch TV or even close my eyes and think when the noise reaches torturous levels,” said the sophomore at a Saigon-based university. Studying at home has become impossible at times, she added. Unable to focus, she would go to a coffee shop to buy “some luxurious quiet.”

Millions of Saigonese join Huong in yearning for some respite from the excessive noise almost constantly generated by road traffic, construction sites, mobile karaoke services and other places like restaurants and pubs.

A street karaoke loudspeaker on Saigon’s Pham Van Dong Street. Photo by VnExpress/Ngoc Bich.

A street karaoke loudspeaker on Saigon’s Pham Van Dong Street. Photo by VnExpress/Ngoc Bich.

Huong recalled her experience when her neighbors rebuilt their homes last year.

“The sound of machines and metal woke me up every morning, even on the weekend, quiet was something next to impossible.”

Not surprisingly, traffic is also a noise pollution culprit, with the sounds of motorbikes, cars and honking, especially during rush hour, hurting the ears of residents in the vicinity.

There are around 9 million motorbikes in Saigon, Vietnam’s most densely populated city with a population of 9 million, creating a high level of noise in many locations.

Measurements taken by the HCM City University of Natural Resources and Environment at 150 spots in the city in 2018 showed excessive noise levels reported at streets with a high density of vehicles. The pollution surpassed permissible levels even between 10 p.m. and 6a.m.

Similar results were found in examinations conducted by the HCM City Environmental Protection Agency. The noise levels at the Hang Xanh Intersection, An Suong Intersection in District 12 and Go Vap roundabout were measured at over 85 decibels, much higher than the 70 decibel limit promulgated by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.

But the most prominent “enemy” is the sound from mobile karaoke service in local bars and restaurants.

The mobile karaoke phenomenon has become a common sight at street restaurants or cafes, typically operated by a pair pushing a large speaker. One person would sing songs as the other sells snacks to the drinkers and diners. They also rent out the equipment to some patrons to sing karaoke on the spot.

In Go Vap District’s No. 10 Street, the loud noise from a mobile karaoke service offered at a street side beer restaurant has tortured Nguyen Hoang Linh and her family for years.

“They start that awful singing from dinner time until midnight. What kind of ear can suffer that loud noise for hours? We cannot sleep or even keep ourselves awake,” Linh said, adding her parents had to move to her sister’s house last year as they could not stand the noise.

The “chorus” from all these sound generators are having physical and mental impacts

Luong Thi Quynh, a resident of District 12, said that her family members suffer from sleeping disorders and her children cannot focus on their homework due to excessive noise from local pubs and sometimes, from her neighbors’ karaoke.

“It gives me and others headaches, no matter how many earplugs we wear or how many times we beg them to turn down the volumes,” Quynh said.

Doan Ngoc Hai, director of the Institute of Occupational Health and the Environment, said noise pollution can have long-term impacts including loss of hearing.

It can also lead to sleeping disorders and high blood pressure, while children can suffer cognitive impairment, he said.

Earlier this month, Nguyen Huu Hung, deputy head of the city’s health department, confirmed that people hearing more noise tend to use more sedatives as their mental health is severely influenced.

Front view of a restaurant on HCMCs Pham Van Dong Street which was fined for producing excessive noise, March 7, 2021. Photo courtesy of the Binh Thanh District Peoples Committee.

Front view of a restaurant on HCMC’s Pham Van Dong Street which was fined for producing excessive noise, March 7, 2021. Photo courtesy of the Binh Thanh District People’s Committee.

‘Surely go mad’

“I will go mad living in this noise every day, I will surely go mad,” Quynh stated.

The madness can kill, sometimes.

Last October, a man in the southern province of Dong Nai was stabbed to death by his neighbor after singing karaoke loudly until near midnight and reacting aggressively when asked to stop. Violence has become less uncommon in such situations.

HCMC Chairman Nguyen Thanh Phong said at a February meeting that he has received numerous complaints about the noise caused by the portable loudspeakers and wireless microphone, especially after 10 p.m.

“People work hard all day and it is unacceptable that they come home only to be tormented by such noise. Local authorities and related agencies should take responsibility for this situation, which should not be considered a normal occurrence.”

Many people, especially old people and children, try to escape the noise by moving out of an area.

In Binh Thanh District, 58-year-old Le Thi Kim moved to her son’s house in Go Vap District to get away from the noise of the Hang Xanh intersection.

“I could not get a single second of quiet during the day, so I quit that area,” Kim said.

Many people have actually moved several times due to the noise pollution at different locations in the city.

Nguyen Hoang Anh, a Hanoian living in District 2, said he has moved three times in the last two years, from District 4 to 10, and then to 2.

“If it not from a bar or beer parlor, it is from a neighbor who loves to sing karaoke all day. Many neighborhoods were cursed by the noisy nightmare and I kept escaping,” Anh said.

Many who cannot afford to move, keep asking those creating the noise to tone it down, but their pleas generally fall on deaf ears.

“I tell them every day, but they say it is none of my business,” said Tran Trong Hoang, residing in Go Vap District’s Pham Van Dong Street, home to many bars and pubs.

Local authorities respond to complaints, but fines have not proven an effective deterrent. Dealing with excessive noise is a challenge because of a lack of strict and resolute action by local authorities, according to To Thi Bich Chau, president of the HCMC Fatherland Front Committee unit that monitors the city administration’s activities and policies on behalf of the public.

Le Hung Anh, a Go Vap District resident, said that after complaints are filed, ward officials and local police would check out the source, but they would only issue a verbal warning to the offending household. The culprits would agree to lower their volume, but only while law enforcement personnel were within earshot.

According to the city’s Department of Natural Resources and Environment, it issued fines of more than VND818 million ($35,356) in 141 cases of noise pollution in 17 districts in 2019 and 2020.

The government issued a decree in 2013 that imposes a fine for causing “loud noises, making noises, or commotions in residential areas or public places between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m,” but fines of VND100,000-300,000 ($4.33-13) have been criticized as being paltry.

Officials have pointed out another hurdle – the lack of equipment to measure noise levels.

Phan Dinh An, a ward official in Go Vap District, said the authorities can’t determine how much noise “the karaoke is making.” He said municipal inspectors should install third-party apps to measure noise levels, generating concrete proof that neighborhood singers are violating the law.

Recently, the HCMC government ordered relevant authorities to crack down on mobile karaoke services, but noise caused by traffic and construction was not mentioned.

Huong is hoping for some respite from this order.

“Those businesses and people don’t care about anyone living around them. This is a society, not their living room.”

Huong is hoping that she will not have to keep going to a coffee shop to buy some “luxurious quiet” she can’t get at home.

HCMC begins to act against noise pollution

Bombarded Saigonese yearn to consign the din to the bin

HCMC begins to act against noise pollution

Filed Under: Uncategorized noise, HCMC, Saigon, Ho Chi Minh City, noise pollution, environment, Bombarded Saigonese yearn to consign the din to the bin - VnExpress International, abdul jabbar bin karam din

Vietnamese life expectancy up, but non-infectious disease cases rise

April 9, 2021 by vietnamnews.vn

People exercise at a park in HCM City. Health experts recommend that people carefully watch what they eat, be physically active, avoid the use of tobacco and alcohol, and lower stress levels. VNS Photo Bồ Xuân Hiệp

HCM CITY — Although average life expectancy has increased, the number of cases of non-infectious disease among Vietnamese has risen, Dr Nguyễn Thị Kim Tiến, head of the Department of Health Protection and Care of Central Officers, said.

Tiến spoke on Thursday at an annual national workshop on health and longevity held in HCM City.

The average life expectancy of Vietnamese is 73.6 compared to 68.6 in 1999, according to the population census in 2019. However, Vietnamese women are ill an average of a total of 11 years, compared to eight years for men, she said.

“Non-infectious chronic diseases are the number one killer today, with more than 70 per cent of deaths coming from cardiovascular disease, cancer and diabetes,” she noted.

The number of cases increase significantly from the age of 40 due to aging, inadequate nutrition, high consumption of tobacco and alcohol, stress, and other factors.

“The number in Việt Nam has reached alarming levels,” she said, adding that “how we age depends hugely on how we behave.”

She said that people should carefully watch what they eat, be physically active, avoid the use of tobacco and alcohol, and lower stress levels.

“You should listen to your body and see a doctor as soon as possible if ill because early detection is important in treatment, reducing mortality and improving quality of life,” she said.

Aging population

In 2011, Việt Nam began to enter the period of an aging population and is one of the countries with the fastest aging rates in the world.

In 2017, the number of people 60 years and older accounted for 11.9 per cent of the total population.

This group will account for about 21 million people by 2038, or 20 per cent of the population. The number will reach 27 million or 25 per cent of the population by 2050, according to the General Statistics Office.

The average life expectancy of Vietnamese is 1.6 years higher than the world average, but the population is about 16 years older than the world population.

Dr. Lê Đình Thanh, director of HCM City-based Thống Nhất Hospital, said the rapid aging of the population poses huge challenges to a low to middle-income country like Việt Nam, requiring the country to improve its social security and healthcare system for the elderly.

Việt Nam needs to raise awareness about preparation for old age, including planning for financial security, and ensuring medical examination and treatment as well as social policies for the elderly.

Infectious diseases kill more than 300 people per year in the country, while non-infectious diseases kill over 400,000, according to the Ministry of Health.

As many as 70 per cent of deaths every year are caused by non-infectious diseases, of which 40 per cent occur to people under 70 years old.

Non-infectious diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, mental illness and cancer, not only affect longevity but also the quality of life.

Experts attribute the reasons for the rising number of cases to the fact that people lack awareness about prevention of such diseases. As many as 49 per cent of men smoke, and 77 per cent of the population drinks alcohol, while 11 per cent of them drink at an alarming level.

Salt consumption in Việt Nam is double the amount recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The Ministry of Health has set a goal to ensure by 2025 that deaths caused by non-infectious diseases will fall to 20 per cent from the current 70 per cent.

The goal is to reduce the proportion of people smoking by 30 per cent and those drinking alcohol by 10 per cent, while reducing salt intake by 30 per cent. — VNS

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Philippines logs highest COVID-19 cases ever at 8,019

March 22, 2021 by en.vietnamplus.vn

Philippines logs highest COVID-19 cases ever at 8,019 hinh anh 1 A woman gets vaccinated against COVID-19 in Marikina city of the Philippines on March 2, 2021 (Photo: Xinhua/VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – The Philippines’ Department of Health (DOH) on March 22 recorded 8,019 new confirmed COVID-19 cases – the highest single-day tally so far.

This brings the country’s total confirmed cases to 671,792.

The DOH also reported four new deaths due to COVID-19, bringing the death toll to 12,972. Meanwhile, recoveries are 577,850.

On the day, Thailand reported 73 new COVID-19 cases, mostly domestically transmitted ones, and one fatality, according to the Center for the COVID-19 Situation Administration (CCSA).

Of the new cases, 66 were reported as domestic infections while seven others were imported ones. Of those domestic cases, 33 were confirmed in Samut Sakhon, 21 in Bangkok and six in Pathum Thani.

Thailand has so far confirmed a total of 27,876 cases, 24,892 of which were domestic infections.

The fatality, confirmed as the 91st so far in Thailand, was a 60-year-old Thai man, who reportedly had lung cancer, diabetes and high blood pressure.

Meanwhile, Cambodia registered 73 new COVID-19 cases on March 22, bringing the total number of infections in the kingdom to 1,753.

The new infections included 71 local cases – 32 in Preah Sihanouk province, 28 in capital Phnom Penh, five in Kampong Thom province, three in Kandal province, and one each in Siem Reap, Prey Veng and Kep provinces./.

VNA

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Hanoi detects suspected community case of COVID-19

March 25, 2021 by vov.vn

This comes after a 78-year-old female residing in Kim Thu commune of Thanh Oai district was recorded suffering from heart failure and high blood pressure.

As a result she was examined at Thanh Oai Hospital on March 18 while suffering from symptoms such as a cough, fever, and chest pains.

She was subsequently brought to Ha Dong General Hospital on March 24 where she was tested once again for novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

The old woman is currently receiving treatment at the National Hospital of Tropical Diseases in Hanoi.

A total of six F1 cases have now been identified, including her son, 47, her daughter-in-law, 41, her two grandchildren, 19 and 13, along with her two neighbours.

However, the case was later confirmed to have tested negative for the SARS-CoV-2 virus on the afternoon of March 25.

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