position:minister of health

  • Finland’s basic income trial boosts happiness but not employment | Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-finland-basic-income/finlands-basic-income-trial-boosts-happiness-but-not-employment-idUSKCN1PX0
    https://s4.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20190208&t=2&i=1354502227&w=1200&r=LYNXNPEF170XW

    HELSINKI (Reuters) - Finland’s basic income scheme did not spur its unemployed recipients to work more to supplement their earnings as hoped but it did help their wellbeing, researchers said on Friday as the government announced initial findings.

    The two-year trial, which ended a month ago, saw 2,000 Finns, chosen randomly from among the unemployed, become the first Europeans to be paid a regular monthly income by the state that was not reduced if they found work.

    Finland — the world’s happiest country last year, according to the United Nations — is exploring alternatives to its social security model.

    The trial was being watched closely by other governments who see a basic income as a way of encouraging the unemployed to take up often low-paid or temporary work without fear of losing their benefits. That could help reduce dependence on the state and cut welfare costs, especially as greater automation sees humans replaced in the workforce.

    Finland’s minister of health and social affairs Pirkko Mattila said the impact on employment of the monthly pay cheque of 560 euros ($635) “seems to have been minor on the grounds of the first trial year”.

    But participants in the trial were happier and healthier than the control group.

    “The basic income recipients of the test group reported better wellbeing in every way (than) the comparison group,” chief researcher Olli Kangas said.

    Chief economist for the trial Ohto Kanniainen said the low impact on employment was not a surprise, given that many jobless people have few skills or struggle with difficult life situations or health concerns.
    Owner Sini Marttinen poses for a picture at her coffee shop she founded while benefitting from Finland’s basic income scheme in Helsinki, Finland January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Philip O’Connor

    “Economists have known for a long time that with unemployed people financial incentives don’t work quite the way some people would expect them to,” he added.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL BOOST

    Sini Marttinen, 36, had been unemployed for nearly a year before “winning the lottery”, as she described the trial.

    Her basic income gave her enough confidence to open a restaurant with two friends. “I think the effect was a lot psychological,” the former IT consultant told Reuters.

    “You kind of got this idea you have two years, you have the security of 560 euros per month ... It gave me the security to start my own business.”

    Her income only rose by 50 euros a month compared to the jobless benefit she had been receiving, “but in an instant you lose the bureaucracy, the reporting”, Marttinen said.

    Mira Jaskari, 36, who briefly found a job during the trial but lost it due to poor health, said losing the basic income had left her feeling more insecure about money.

    The center-right government’s original plan was to expand the basic income scheme after two years as it tries to combat unemployment which has been persistently high for years but reached a 10-year low of 6.6 percent in December.

    That followed the imposition of benefits sanctions on unemployed people who refused work.

    The basic income has been controversial, however, with leaders of the main Finnish political parties keen to streamline the benefits system but wary of offering “money for nothing”, especially ahead of parliamentary elections due in April.
    Slideshow (2 Images)
    TAX BIND

    Prime Minister Juha Sipila’s Centre Party has proposed limiting the basic income to poor people, with sanctions if they reject a job offer, while Conservative finance minister Petteri Orpo says he favors a scheme like Britain’s Universal Credit.

    The higher taxes that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) says would be needed to pay for basic income schemes might also be off-putting for voters.

    In a review of the Finnish scheme last year, the OECD warned that implementing it nationally and cost-neutrally for the state would imply significant income redistribution, especially towards couples from single people, and increase poverty.

    The researchers have acknowledged that the Finnish pilot was less than realistic because it did not include any tax claw-back once participants found work and reached a certain income level.

    Swiss voters rejected a similar scheme in 2016. Italy is due to introduce a “citizens’ wage” in April in a major overhaul of the welfare state, which will offer income support to the unemployed and poor.

    Trial participants were generally positive, however, with Tuomas Muraja, a 45-year-old journalist and author, saying the basic income had allowed him to concentrate on writing instead of form-filling or attending jobseekers’ courses.

    He said the end of the two-year trial, during which he published two books, had made it difficult again for him to accept commissions, because “I ... can earn only 300 euros per month without losing any benefits”.

    “If people are paid money freely that makes them creative, productive and welfare brings welfare,” Muraja told Reuters about his experience of the pilot.

    “If you feel free, you feel safer and then you can do whatever you want. That is my assessment.”

    ($1 = 0.8817 euros)

  • Un autre hiver... un de plus...
    Winter conditions add to migrant hardship in northern Greece

    Freezing weather is exacerbating difficult conditions for migrants in overcrowded refugee camps in northern Greece. Last week the cold spell led to a protest by dozens of migrants at a camp near Thessaloniki. Greek officials have blamed the number of people flooding into the camp from the islands and across the Turkish border. But could the situation have been prevented?

    Harsh winter conditions hit northern Greece a few days into the new year, bringing sub-zero temperatures, strong winds, snow and ice. In the Diavata refugee camp near the port city of Thessaloniki, several hundred people are struggling with basic survival. Yet every week, despite the weather conditions, more continue to arrive.

    “They don’t think about this kind of thing, they just want to move on,” said one man at Diavata after another Afghan family arrived in the snow. “They just think that in the next stage from Turkey, when they go to Greece, everything will be fine.”

    Camp protests

    When they reach Diavata, the migrants find the reality is different. The camp is full to capacity, with around 800 registered asylum seekers. On top of these, there are between 500 and 650 people living at the site without having been registered by migration authorities.

    “Most of them have built their own makeshift shelters and tents, which are not providing them with the protection needed,” says Mike Bonke, the Greece country director of the Arbeiter Samariter Bund (ASB), an NGO providing support services to Diavata. “They have no (safe) heating, washing and sanitation and cooking facilities.”

    Last week, the difficult conditions prompted around 40 migrants to hold a protest outside the camp, burning tires and blockading the road. A truck driver tried to get through the barricade resulting in a fight which left one man in hospital.

    The driver lost his patience and started swearing at the migrants, who threw rocks and broke his windscreen, reports said. The driver and four migrants were charged with causing grievous bodily harm, according to the Greek daily, Katherimini.

    Conditions create health concerns

    Diavata is just one of a number of migrant facilities in northern Greece to have been affected by the cold snap. An NGO contacted by InfoMigrants said that Orestiada, near the Evros river to the east, was covered in snow. Migrants in the critically overcrowded camps on the islands too are contending with snow, frozen water pipes and icy roads.

    According to the ASB, the refugee reception camps lack resources to cope with the current conditions. “Healthcare services at all (refugee reception) sites are not adequate,” Bonke says.

    Agis Terzidis, an advisor to the Greek Minister of Health and Vice-President of the Center for Disease Control (CDC) which coordinates healthcare provision to migrants and refugees, admits that the cold weather, in addition to the poor conditions and overcrowding in the camps, is exacerbating migrants’ health problems. “We have people living in conditions that are not acceptable for anyone,” he says.

    National health system must step up

    In response to the worsening situation, there are plans to boost EU-funded medical teams operating in camps throughout the country, including the islands, Agis Terzidis says. But he told InfoMigrants that from now on, more pressure would be put on the Greek national health system and local hospitals to tackle the problem, rather than medical staff in the camps themselves.

    Terzidis also insisted that fixing the situation in the camps was “not in the mandate” of the CDC, as it was chiefly a result of greater numbers of people arriving and consequent overcrowding.

    Instead, the CDC’s main priority remains vaccinating migrants to prevent outbreaks of hepatitis, measles and other infectious diseases. It also focuses on treating those suffering from chronic diseases, some of whom will likely succumb to the harsh winter conditions.

    Too many people

    With more bleak weather predicted, a vegetable garden is being planned in the Diavata camp, giving the residents something to look forward to. That will have to be abandoned if more people start to arrive when the weather improves.

    The camps continue to be under pressure from the large and unpredictable numbers of arrivals. Currently there are around 20 arrivals per week at Diavata, but that could quickly escalate to hundreds. So far, Greek authorities do not seem to have taken steps to limit how many end up at the camps seeking protection.

    I think we can all agree that this situation should have been solved by registering these refugees in the Greek Migration system and providing them with dignified and safe shelters.
    _ Mike Bonke, Greece country director, Arbeiter Samariter Bund

    As both government and army staff and their NGO colleagues in the camps remain powerless to solve the problem of overcrowding, their main task will be to protect migrants from harm and exposure as the winter enters its coldest months.

    http://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/14401/winter-conditions-add-to-migrant-hardship-in-northern-greece
    #Grèce #asile #migrations #réfugiés #camps_de_réfugiés #neige #froid #Salonique #Softex #Diavata #résistance #protestation

    • Nice Palywood fake news.
      What about the reality on the ground ? :
      –> http://www.israeltoday.co.il/NewsItem/tabid/178/nid/23904/Default.aspx?article=related_stories

      Israel, and in particular Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem, is joining forces with Christians in Australia to provide life-giving medical care to Palestinian Arab children.

      Project Rozana is a collaboration between Hadassah Australia, Anglican Overseas Aid and Hadassah Hospital, which has two locations in Jerusalem. The project has the full support and assistance of the Palestinian Authority health minister.

      The project was inspired by the recent case of 5-year-old Rozana Ghannam, a Palestinian girl from Ramallah. About a year ago, Rozana fell out the window of her 9th-floor apartment.

      “I didn’t expect that Rozana was still alive. I was shouting and weeping, asking anybody to help,” wrote Rozana’s mother, Maysa Ghannam, in a statement read aloud at the launch of Project Rozana in Melbourne, Australia.

      Naturally, first responders wanted to take little Rozana to nearby Ramallah Hospital. But her mother refused, insisting that the broken little girl be rushed to Hadassah Hospital, widely regarded as one of the finest medical facilities in the region.

      Doctors at Hadassah were indeed able to save little Rozana’s life. “Rozana is now a miracle of life, a Palestinian girl who returned to life at the hands of doctors - Jews and Arabs,” wrote her mother.

      Those behind project Rozana, including the Israeli Foreign Ministry, hope via Jewish and Christian outreach arms in Australia to raise at least $500,000 a year. The entirety of the funds will be used to cover the treatment of Palestinian Arab children at Hadassah Hospital, as well as to provide training to Palestinian doctors and specialists.


      –> http://www.palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=157&doc_id=9049

      Official PA daily acknowledges
      Israeli hospital’s medical care
      for Palestinian children and training of doctors

      by Itamar Marcus and Nan Jacques Zilberdik

      The official PA daily reported on a visit by the PA Minister of Health, Hani Abdeen, to Israel’s Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. The daily noted that 30% of the child patients in Hadassah are Palestinians and that the Israeli hospital is training “60 Palestinian medical interns and specialist physicians who will be returning to the [Palestinian] Authority areas to carry out their work.” The hospital has a special program to train Palestinian doctors to treat cancer among children, reported the PA daily.

      The following is the report:
      “[PA] Minister of Health, Hani Abdeen visited the [Israeli] Hadassah Hospital yesterday [May 5, 2013]. This is the first visit by a Palestinian minister to one of the most important Israeli hospitals, according to the hospital’s announcement.
      Minister Abdeen who was accompanied by a delegation that included senior officials of the ministry and of the PA, met with the Director of Ein Karem Hadassah Hospital, Yuval Weiss. He [the minister] visited Palestinian patients being treated in the hospital, and he distributed gifts. [Hospital director] Weiss said: ’We relate to patients without regard to nationality and religion. We treat Muslims, Christians, Jews, and other nationalities without bias, and 30% of the patients who are children are Palestinians.’
      He went on to say: ’We’ve begun cooperating with the Palestinians. We now train teams of physicians from the hospital in Beit Jala in the southern West Bank, to treat cancer among children. We have about 60 Palestinian medical interns and specialist physicians who will be returning to the [Palestinian] Authority areas to carry out their work.’”
      [Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, May 6, 2013]

      This article documenting Israel’s medical care for Palestinian children is a change from common PA accusations that Israel intentionally tries to hurt Palestinians, for example by spreading drugs intentionally among Palestinian youth.

  • Kuwait’s New Cabinet Takes Oath - ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English
    http://english.aawsat.com/2016/12/article55363692/kuwaits-new-cabinet-takes-oath

    The Cabinet comprises of the following ministers: Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Hamad Al-Sabah, First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sheikh Mohammad Al-Khaled Al-Hamad Al-Sabah, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense, Sheikh Khaled Al-Jarrah Al-Sabah, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior, Anas Nasser Al-Saleh, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Sheikh Mohammad Al-Abdullah Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah, Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs, Sheikh Salman Sabah Al-Salem Al-Humoud Al-Sabah, Minister of Information and Minister of State for Youth Affairs, Hind Barrak Al-Sabeeh, Minister of Social Affairs and Labor as well as Minister of State for Economic Affairs, Yaser Abul, Minister of State for Housing Affairs and Minister of State for Utilities, Jamal Mansour Al-Harbi, the Minister of Health, Khaled Nasser Abdullah Al-Roudan, the Minister Commerce and Industry, Abdulrahman Abdulkareem Al-Mutawa’, the as Minister Public Works, Essam Abdulmohsen Al-Marzouq, Minister Electricity and Water as well as the Minister of Oil, Faleh Abdullah Al-Azeb, Minister Justice and the Minister of State for National Assembly Affairs, Mohammad Abdulatif Al-Fares, Minister of Education and Minister of Higher Education, Mohammad Nasser Al-Jabri, Minister of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs as well as Minister of State for the Municipality.

  • Qatar announces major government reshuffle | Middle East Eye
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/qatar-announces-major-government-reshuffle-610406420

    Seven ministerial changes were announced by the official Qatar News Agency.
     
    Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani, a member of the royal family, replaced Khalid al-Attiyah as foreign minister, the QNA said.
     
    The 35-year-old is a senior official who was previously in charge of international cooperation in the foreign ministry.
     
    Attiyah, whose father was the founder of Qatar’s armed forces, was appointed minister of state for defence. The emir himself holds the post of defence minister. 
     
    And Issa bin Saad al-Naimi Juffali was awarded the new position of minister for administrative development and labour and social affairs.
     
    He replaces labour minister Abdullah bin Saleh al-Khulaifi at one of the country’s most high-profile cabinet posts because of international criticism of Doha’s record on migrant workers’ rights.
     
    As notable as the announcement of new faces was the fact that several departments would be merged, which some see as a cost-cutting measure.
     
    Among the newly combined ministries is not only administrative development and labour, but also the departments of culture and sports, transport and communications, and municipality and the environment.
     
    Previously, these were separate departments.
     
    “No doubt this has to do with reducing spending and preventing sagging,” Jamal Abdullah, Head of Gulf Studies at Al-Jazeera Centre, told AFP. 
     
    “Especially as a number of ministries intersect tasks and responsibilities, such as communications and transportation, municipal and environment.”
     
    Qatar has already forecast a budget deficit of more than $12 billion in 2016 — and that could increase as it was calculated at an oil price of $48 per barrel. The current price is around $32.
     
    In addition, the emir warned last December of “wasteful spending, overstaffing and a lack of accountability” across Qatar.
     
    Abdullah also noted that the changes would help “pump young blood into the Qatar decision-making machine”, especially the appointment of a new, relatively young foreign minister.
     
    One post which remained the same was that of prime minister, which has been held by Sheikh Abdullah bin Nasser bin Khalifa al-Thani since 2013.
     
    Also, one woman was named in the reshuffle — Hanan al-Kuwari, who becomes the new minister of health.

  • Former hunger striker Allan’s health improves
    Aug. 24, 2015 6:16 P.M. (Updated: Aug. 24, 2015 7:11 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=767235

    RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — The Palestinian Minister of Health said Monday that former hunger striker Muhammad Allan is in a stable health condition and that his health is improving gradually.

    Jawad Awwad’s statement was released following a meeting with neurologist Adel Misk, who had recently visited and evaluated Allan at the Barzilai Medical Center in Israel where Allan is being treated. Awwad added that Misk evaluated Allan upon Awwad’s request.

    Misk said that after evaluating Allan’s nervous system, he found that Allan’s sense of awareness and muscular development was gradually improving after he had suffered seizures due to a dysfunction in his metabolism from the strike.

    Allan, 31, ended his 66-day hunger strike on Thursday after Israel’s top court suspended his administrative detention. He entered a coma twice before the hunger strike was through.

    A spokesperson at Barzilai Medical Center confirmed Misk’s evaluation, telling Ma’an that Allan is “improving, he’s awake, his sense of awareness and strength is improving and he’s responding.”

    Misk added that he requested Allan be given new medical tests, including a new MRI scan and a brain EEG.

  • New Zealand MP demoted after suggesting #homeopathy use in #Ebola fight
    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11353054 #New_Zealand

    This is right up there with Thabo Mbeki’s Minister of Health who emphasized treating South Africa’s #AIDS epidemic with alcoholic beverages and vegetables such as garlic and beetroot
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manto_Tshabalala-Msimang

  • Public health sector in Gaza faces disaster under tightened siege | Occupied Palestine | فلسطين
    http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/2013/09/21/public-health-sector-in-gaza-faces-disaster-under-tight

    Public health sector in Gaza faces disaster under tightened siege

    September 21, 2013 by occupiedpalestine 0 Comments

    premature-baby-at-emarati-hospital-gaza

    Intensive care medical units such as this one at the Al-Emarati Hospital in Gaza face significant cuts to their power and medical supplies

    Middle East Monitor | Sept 21, 2013

    The Minister of Health in Gaza has urged the international community to put pressure on Israel and Egypt to lift the siege and allow medicines, medical supplies and basic construction material to be allowed into the beleaguered territory.

    Dr Mofeed Mokhalalati said that the health sector in the Gaza Strip faces a real disaster under the tightened siege following the closure of the Rafah border crossing by the Egyptian government.

    “Of the medicines on the essential drugs list,” said Dr Mokhalalati, “145 items have completely run out.”

    The Rafah closure, he added, also means that there are around 1,000 patients who are unable to be sent for specialist treatment in Egypt, in addition to 300 more who have been referred there by the health ministry.

    The minister pointed out that the border closure also deprives patients in the Gaza Strip of the services of visiting medical professionals who travel to the territory to share their skills and perform life-saving surgery free of charge.

    Appealing to the people of Egypt to ease the suffering of their brothers and sisters in Gaza, Dr Mokhalalati warned that the shortage of diesel fuel is having a major effect on the ability of hospitals and medical centres to function properly.

    “Health centres alone each need 360 litres a month for emergency generators as the electricity supply is only connected for 12 hours a day,” he said.

    Dr Mokhalalati urged human rights organisations, including the International Committee of the Red Cross, the UN Organisation for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the World Health Organisation to support Palestinians’ right to health provision and their freedom of movement.

    He appealed for urgent supplies of medicines, disposables, medical supplies and fuel to keep the health sector operating across Gaza.

  • Le parti du Rassemblement de l’Unité Nationale, créé en soutien à la monarchie en février 2011, demande la démission du Ministre de la santé après le décès d’une fillette de 12 ans à Salmaniyya hospital.

    Sheikh Al Arabi added it’s surprising that we have not seen the mobility of the Minister of Health or officials in the Ministry of Health rise to act upon this tragedy.

    He added that this is a very serious indicator that shows an apparent failure and weakness in between taking responsibility. He also pointed out that society can not accept such a decline or failure in the interaction with the momentous positions, assuring that it is not acceptable for the loss of a child to meet with such guidance from the officials concerned and to take the necessary action.

    Al Arabi assured, that the least responsibility requirement is for the minister to leave by himself at a live news conference to show everyone the truth and facts of what happened with transparency and clarity, however, unfortunately nothing close to that has happened.

  • Bahrain creates Supreme Council for Health (on 28 January 2013)
    Sacrée reprise en main du domaine médical

    In a bid to develop a national health strategy and monitor the development and application of quality standards for health services, Bahrain on January 28th announced the creation of the Supreme Council for Health by royal decree.

    Minister of State for Defence Affairs, Lt. Gen. Dr. Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdullah Al Khalifa, will chair the new council, and Bahraini Minister of Health Sadeq al-Shihabi will serve as vice chairman. Eleven other members will serve the council on a four-year, renewable term. [...]

    “Bahrain now ranks eighth in the world in terms of the increase in the number of diabetes and obesity cases,” she [dr. Sumaya al Jowde, MP] said. These conditions, along with high blood pressure and cholesterol-related diseases, “require that a comprehensive national plan be rolled out to all government ministries, not just the Ministry of Health”, she said.

    On aurait pu naivement penser que le MoH était jutement le lieu pour faire face à une telle tâche.

    http://al-shorfa.com/en_GB/articles/meii/features/2013/02/14/feature-03

  • #Global_Fund monies finally released | #South_Africa
    http://plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=94927

    More than seven months overdue, the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria grant will finally be released to key South African AIDS organizations that have been struggling to survive. Some were on the verge of shutting down.

    The Global Fund released US$7,106,426.91 to the South African National Treasury on 6 February, the same day seven of the grant’s sub-recipients delivered an open letter to Minister of Health, Aaron Motsoaledi, pleading for intervention to bring the Fund’s “life-threatening delays” to an end.

    #sida #afrique_du_sud

    • précision de #TAC

      The headline (...) have left you with an optimistic impression if you did not read the remainder of the article.
      Only $7.1m of the over $12m owed to the Round 6 sub-recipients for July to December 2011 (which includes TAC) has been released. Also, as of the time of writing, the money is still not in the TAC bank account. Furthermore, we have not received our tranche for January 2012.

  • Le commentaire d’Angry Arab sur le nouveau gouvernement libanais.
    http://angryarab.blogspot.com/2011/06/lebanese-cabinet.html

    Lebanese politics is so boring. So there is a new cabinet. Nothing major really. But Muhammad Jawad Khalifah (Amal’s Minister of Health) is finished politically, because in Wikileaks documents he mocked Hizbullah and its resisters. He also lied about Wikileaks by producing his own version of the minute of the meeting.

    I detest Najib Miqati: the notion that you can have a billionaire heading a cabinet that has an agenda of resistance is foolish.

    The smartest move was done by Nabih Birri: who sacrificed a Shi‘ite Minister, thereby increasing the Sunni Share in the cabinet: so far the first time since Ta’if, Sunni representation in the cabinet is not equal to Shi‘ite representation. This was shrewdly intended to undermine the Hariri blatantly sectarian agitation of Hariri family and the various Saudi tools in Lebanon. Typically, Amal produces a lousy minister of foreign affairs. Amal is skilled in producing the worst ministers in the history of Lebanon—and the competition is stiff. There are many ministers who are corrupt, from what I hear.

    ‘Awn produced a minister of culture whose only credential is that he is related to his wife. I trust Miqati like Habash trusted Arafat.

    Sharbil Nahhas is probably the best minster in the history of Lebanon, but he left the Ministry of Telecommunication (he is now Minster of Labor). But the new Minister of Telecommunication, Sahnawi, is very smart. In Lebanon, the best strategy is to not harbor hope about any faction. This why, you won’t be disappointed.