tk88 bet

Free heart disease screening for Dak Lak poor children

Over 300 disadvantaged children from 1-16 years old across the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak have received free screening check-up to detect congenital heart diseases under a programme conducted at the provincial General Hospital in late April.
Over 300 disadvantaged children from 1-16 years old across the CentralHighlands province of Dak Lak have received free screeningcheck-up to detect congenital heart diseases under a programme conductedat the provincial General Hospital in late April.

Theprogramme, named “Trai tim Hang Huu”, was funded by the Dai Nam JointStock Company and carried out by the provincial Children Sponsoring Fundin conjunction with the Ho Chi Minh City Medicine and PharmacyHospital.

Besides disease screening, the programme hasfinanced surgery for over 200 poor children with heart-related diseasesfrom Binh Dinh, Binh Duong, Binh Phuoc, Can Tho, An Giang and Hau Giangprovinces as of April this year.

In Dak Lak alone, 19 child patients of heart diseases have received free surgery under the programme.

Accordingto Lam Dinh Nhiem, Director of the provincial Children Sponsoring Fund,the programme has committed 3 billion VND in 2014 and 2015 to fundexamination and operations for children with congenital heart disease.

Since2005, the Fund implemented a programme to support families whosechildren suffer from heart-related diseases. As a result, thousands oflocal children received screening examination, while 449 of them wereprovided with heart surgeries at a total cost of 26 billion VND.-VNA

See more

Medical facilities have been instructed to prepare necessary infrastructure, medical equipment, and supplies to ensure effective patient admission, isolation, diagnosis, treatment, and infection control. - Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

Enhanced anti-COVID-19 measurꩵes in place amid rising cases

According to the World Health Organisation, more than 25,000 COVID-19 cases have been recorded globally over the past month. Notably, from January 1 to May 10, Thailand reported nearly 54,000 infections and 16 deaths. The rise in cases in Thailand has been linked to the spread of XBB.1.16 subvariant.
{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|{tk88 bet}|