Lao Midwives’ Association preparing the launch of a new helpline with UNFPA support

The Lao Midwives’ Association (LMA), with the support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), held a virtual workshop in late September with the Regional Representatives of the association to discuss and prepare the launch of a new helpline.

The helpline will target two groups: the first is pregnant women and lactating mothers and their families and communities and surroundings, while the second will be midwives.

They will be able to contact this helpline to get information and advice on pregnancy, breastfeeding, and midwifery peer support.

Ms. Phouthone Chanthalangsy, Vice President of LMA, welcomed the idea of establishing a helpline.

She explained “This is the preliminary training to prepare midwives for providing support to pregnant women and mothers via the helpline. It is crucial during COVID-19 that pregnant women and mothers can connect with midwives to seek advice and counseling. So, I am very pleased to see that LMA is using innovation to contribute to improving maternal health in Laos.”

The helpline aims to be a channel to provide peer support to practicing and midwifery students across the country. The association has employed a midwife full-time for the first time to support this activity, and it is an exciting step for them. For the LMA, this is an opportunity to grow their offer portfolio and increase their attractiveness to grow their membership base.

In the workshop, participants discussed the standard operating procedures (SOP) and how the helpline will provide a space for women to receive up-to-date and accurate information, including COVID-19 impacts on pregnancy and breastfeeding. They interacted through exercises and animated talks to identify the risks, train on the different possibilities of questions, respond, orient women to other services when necessary, and inform other midwives who might consult for critical cases they deal with.

“I learned new things I have never done before, and I had opportunities to exchange ideas with midwifery teachers and peers,” said Ms. Nyvanh Malaisone, Helpline staff who participated in the workshop.

Another participant, Ms. Lotchana, a member of LMA, said that she was excited to interact with midwifery teachers and students. She said, “I learned many tips from the simulated activities during the workshop.”

Given the current restrictions, midwives can still not meet in person, but this does not stop them from continuing their work and adapting to exchange and learn together. For example, LMA has been using online platforms for training for over a year to continue running workshops, training, and capacity-building sessions.

The International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD25) commitments in Lao PDR include clear objectives on the training, deployment, and the role of midwives to protect maternal health and sexual and reproductive health. UNFPA supports the Lao Government and local partners such as the LMA to upscale the capacities of midwives, their number, diversity, and expertise, including through innovation and strong partnerships with The Government of Luxembourg, KOFIH, Maternal Health Thematic Fund (MHTF), and UNFPA core funding.

Source: Lao News Agency

IV Japan founder awarded by Japanese Foreign Minister

On 26 October, Ms. TOMINAGA Sachiko, Founder of International Cooperation NGO IV Japan, received the Certificate of Commendation from Japanese Foreign Minister MOTEGI Toshimitsu. The award was presented by Ambassador TAKEWAKA at his residence.

Ms. TOMINAGA has made significant contributions in promoting Japan-Laos cooperation mainly in the field of education and vocational training.

In 1988, she founded the NGO and moved her focus of activities to the Lao PDR in 1994. Over 25 years, she has been voluntarily providing scholarships for Lao children and vocational trainings.

She also constructed 22 schools and 9 vocational training centers in Laos. Microfinance project for Lao people was launched as well by her leadership.

She is also playing her unique role as a radio reporter for Japan NHK to introduce Lao culture and an organizer of Japanese Tea lessons in Vientiane for over a decade.

The Embassy of Japan expresses its sincere congratulations to Ms. TOMINAGA for her outstanding achievements in promoting mutual understanding and friendship between the two nations.

Source: Lao News Agency

FAO, USAID Provide 12,000 COVID-19 Rapid Tests to Lao PDR

The Lao PDR’s continued efforts to detect and mitigate COVID-19 have received a boost from international partners.

United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) handed over vital Panbio COVID-19 rapid test kits and AgPath-IDTM One-Step RT-PCR Reagents to the Lao Ministry of Health (MOH) Thursday.

Under the “Emergency assistance to strengthen COVID-19 detection capacity in the Lao PDR” with total historical funding of USD300,000 from USAID, FAO has provided various equipment to the National Centre for Laboratory and Epidemiology of the Department of Communicable Disease Control to support detection capacity including Smart Testing Booths, reagents and supplies for COVID-19 testing.

These rapid test kits are funded by USAID via FAO to enhance the Ministry’s capacity to detect and respond to ongoing COVID-19 outbreaks.

A handover ceremony was attended by Dr. Snong Thongsna, Vice-Minister of Health of the Lao PDR, United States Ambassador to the Lao PDR Peter M. Haymond, and FAO Representative Nasar Hayat.

Speaking at the event, Dr. Snong expressed gratitude for support in tackling an alarming surge of COVID- 19 cases. “Our sincere thanks and gratitude to USAID and FAO and your teams for your value support and commitment to continue support and work closely with Ministry of Health to response COVID-19 pandemic in the Lao PDR.”

“Today’s handover reaffirms our commitment to supporting the Lao PDR in ending the pandemic. We are proud of our partnership with the Government of the Lao PDR and FAO in this important work,” said Ambassador Haymond.

“In addition to addressing the health impact of COVID-19, the United States is supporting the Government to address the impacts on the Lao economy, the education system and rule of law. This year marks the 5th anniversary of the U.S. – Lao Comprehensive Partnership, and we are proud to help Lao PDR build back better and progress beyond COVID-19.”

FAO Representative to the Lao PDR Nasar Hayat said that COVID-19 had severe and adverse impacts not only on human health but also on the food system, food security and nutrition. Impacts on income and livelihood security particularly affected the poor and the most vulnerable in the Lao PDR.

“Only through partnership and collaboration, can we fight this pandemic effectively, save lives and gradually build back better under the new normal context,” he said.

Mr Nasar said FAO stood committed in continuing its provision of technical support to assist the Government to better deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, he said. He also expressed a special thanks for USAID’s contribution to the partnership and for providing support to the Government of the Lao PDR in combating the COVID-19 pandemic.

The project also trained officers in northern, central, southern provinces. Trainees included public and animal health officers and immigration police officers. There, officers are improving surveillance, disease inspection, sample collection, infection prevention, control, and environmental cleaning practices.

Training workshops allowed these government officers to share lessons learned and experiences in the prevention and response to COVID-19.

In addition, calibration and certification services were provided for laboratory biosafety cabinets.

Source: Lao News Agency

Why US Consumers Pay Such High Prices for Prescription Drugs

Congressional Democrats this week proposed an addition to U.S. President Joe Biden’s climate and social spending legislation that would allow Medicare, the federal government’s health care program for older Americans, to negotiate with drugmakers over the cost of certain prescription medications.

U.S. consumers pay higher prices for prescription medications than almost any of their peers in the developed world, a fact that generations of politicians and advocates have struggled in vain to change. If passed, the proposal working its way through Congress would make a dent, though a relatively small one, in that long-standing problem.

The plan being discussed would give Medicare officials the ability to negotiate pricing on a sliver of the thousands of prescription medications on the market in the United States, beginning with about 10 drugs and capped at 20. Liberal members of Congress at first had hoped to grant Medicare authority to negotiate the prices of up to 250 costly drugs every year.

Though small, the number of drugs that would be covered by the proposal represents a disproportionate amount of the annual “spend” on drugs by Medicare patients.

A study by the Kaiser Family Foundation released this year determined that the 10 top-selling drugs covered under Medicare Part D accounted for 16% of net total spending in 2019. The top 50 drugs — representing just 8.5% of all drugs covered under the program — accounted for 80% of spending.

The top 10 drugs, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation include “three cancer medications, four diabetes medications, two anticoagulants and one rheumatoid arthritis treatment.”

Confusing system

Unlike many countries outside the U.S., where the government is able to negotiate drug prices and bring down the cost for a single national health care system, the landscape in the U.S. is highly fragmented. Most Americans with health insurance are covered by policies issued by for-profit companies in the private sector.

Americans 65 years and older are eligible for Medicare, which takes the place of a private insurer, but with some critical differences. For many years, Medicare did not offer prescription drug coverage, forcing Medicare patients to pay for medications out of pocket or seek third-party insurance coverage for their medications.

In 2003, Congress created Medicare Part D, under which private insurers offered medication coverage that met minimum requirements established by the federal government. While that program reduced costs for many seniors, cost-sharing provisions and design flaws mean that many recipients continue to face financially crippling bills for medication. A key reason is that each insurance provider must negotiate prices with drug companies individually, rather than using the bargaining power of the entire Medicare population to insist on lower costs.

‘Subsidizing R&D for the world’

For years, advocates for change have pointed out that drug companies set prices in the U.S. far above those in other countries in which they sell the same drugs. A study by the Rand Corporation this year comparing the U.S. with 32 other countries found that drugs cost on average 256% more in the U.S.

“American consumers are subsidizing the R&D for the world,” said Lovisa Gustafsson, vice president of the Controlling Health Care Costs program at the Commonwealth Fund, a think tank in Washington, D.C.

Compounding the problem is that Americans also shoulder a much greater share of the cost for their prescription medications.

“Patients in the U.S. face far higher cost-sharing than in a lot of other countries. So, just because they have insurance doesn’t mean that patients can actually afford the drugs that they need currently,” Gustafsson said. “There’s survey after survey showing that 20% to 25% of Americans can’t afford the drugs they’re prescribed by their physician, or split pills, or don’t get the prescription filled, because they just can’t afford it. And that’s even when they have insurance.”

Putting a lid on costs

An important element of the proposal before Congress is that it would place an annual cap of $2,000 on the co-payments that Medicare patients can be charged for their medications.

The prospect of a cap on out-of-pocket costs was well-received by many calling for reforms, such as AARP, a large advocacy group for older Americans.

“There’s no greater issue affecting the pocketbooks of seniors on Medicare than the ever-increasing costs of prescription drugs,” AARP CEO Jo Ann Jenkins said in a statement. “For decades, seniors have been at the mercy of Big Pharma. Allowing Medicare to finally negotiate drug prices is a big win for seniors. Preventing prices from rising faster than inflation and adding a hard out-of-pocket cap to Part D will provide real relief for seniors with the highest drug costs.”

Drug firms unhappy

PhRMA, a powerful trade group representing the pharmaceuticals industry, reacted unhappily to news of the proposal.

“If passed, it will upend the same innovative ecosystem that brought us lifesaving vaccines and therapies to combat COVID-19,” PhRMA President and CEO Stephen J. Ubl said in a statement. “Under the guise of ‘negotiation,’ it gives the government the power to dictate how much a medicine is worth and leaves many patients facing a future with less access to medicines and fewer new treatments.”

“While we’re pleased to see changes to Medicare that cap what seniors pay out of pocket for prescription drugs, the proposal lets insurers and middlemen like pharmacy benefit managers off the hook when it comes to lowering costs for patients at the pharmacy counter,” Ubl continued. “It threatens innovation and makes a broken health care system even worse.”

Industry claims exaggerated?

Numerous supporters of allowing the government to negotiate on drug prices claim that the industry’s insistence that it will stymie innovation is exaggerated.

One piece of evidence they point to is a study released by the Congressional Budget Office in August. The CBO created a model in which pharmaceutical companies were faced with the following scenario: A policy is put in place that reduces the return on their most profitable drugs by 15% to 25%.

The agency estimated that the impact would be a reduction of the number of new drugs coming onto the market by only one-half of 1% over the first 10 years of the new policy. That would increase to as much as an 8% reduction in the first three decades of the program.

Source: Voice of America

New Zealand Researchers Hope to Replace Fossil Fuel Use in Antarctica With Green Hydrogen

A New Zealand research project is looking at ways to produce hydrogen in Antarctica to reduce carbon emissions.

A four-month New Zealand project is investigating whether hydrogen could be generated, used and stored at Scott Base, its Antarctic research facility, to reduce its reliance on carbon-based fuels. Those fuels are currently used for transportation, cooking and heating. A special grade fuel is shipped in on ice-breakers.

Surplus power from wind turbines at Scott Base could be used to generate green hydrogen for hydrogen fuel cells that produce electricity by combining hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

The hydrogen initiative is a collaboration between Antarctica, New Zealand, a government scientific body, and the University of Canterbury in Christchurch. The project started in August and will finish this month.

The project faces some obstacles, including geographic isolation and extreme weather. Antarctica is the coldest, windiest and driest continent. In 1983, a temperature of minus 89.2 degrees was recorded.

Brendon Miller, a consultant chemical engineer, says it is an ambitious plan.

“We would like to demonstrate that we can use hydrogen effectively as an energy source to replace fossil fuels. It is a very challenging environment to do it in Antarctica. But, actually, there are some things going for it because the alternates like batteries are quite awkward to use for long-term storage particularly at very cold temperatures,” Miller said.

New Zealand’s work in Antarctica focuses in large part on global warming. Experts have said the world’s southernmost continent was very sensitive to rising temperatures, and it also influenced the global climate system. Earlier this year, the New Zealand government said it would spend $200 million to guarantee the future of its scientific hub at Scott Base.

Scientific projects in Antarctica are highly collaborative, bringing together researchers from around the world.

Twenty-nine countries, including Australia, China and the United States, operate bases in Antarctica.

Source: Voice of America