Secondary Schools in Phnom Penh to Reopen Next Week

All public and private secondary schools in Phnom Penh capital are allowed to reopen from Sept. 15 onwards, according to an announcement of the municipal administration released this evening.
The decision was made thanks to the high vaccination rate among teachers, education staff and children-youth aged from 12 to under 18 years old, and to steady decline of new infections in the capital.
For the kindergarten and primary schools, the announcement added, they must apply for authorisation from the municipal administration which will dispatch a working group to examine and assess the risk level in accordance to the actual situation before making any decision.
At the same time, the Phnom Penh municipal administration issued a directive on the preventive measures against the COVID-19 spread for the reopening of public and private educational institutions.
The measures include continued education on health safety rules and the “3 Dos, 3 Don’ts” measure, the class size limit (at most 15 students per classroom) along with 1.5 metre safety distancing, mandatory mask wearing, temperature screening, hand cleaning, conducting rapid tests on all teachers and education staff before school resumption, and so on.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Ministry, ADB Bolstering Science and Technology Education in Cambodia

The Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports in collaboration with the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has organised a workshop on the preparation of Cambodia Science and Technology Project in Upper Secondary Education “CAM STEP UP”.
The workshop took place on Wednesday through a videoconference under the presidency of H.E. Hang Chuon Naron, Minister of Education, Youth and Sports.
Senior officials of the Ministries of Economy and Finance, and Education, Youth and Sports, representatives from ADB, and rectors of public educational institutions joined the preparation workshop.
It discussed key contents of the project including CAM STEP UP plans and primary review of three result indicators such as equitable expansion of upper secondary education, quality strengthening of “STEM” teaching and learning, and capacity development for leading and managing educational institutions and schools.
The five-year (2022-2027) Cambodia Science and Technology Project for Upper Education is well aligned with the educational strategic plan 2019-2023, and the educational roadmap 2030 of the Cambodia’s Sustainable Development Goals 4 (SDG4).
It also builds on accumulated experience and achievements from the Upper Secondary Education Sector Development Projects 1 and 2 (USESDP 1) and (USESDP 2).

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Agreement to Launch Digital School System “Wiki School” Signed

The National Institute of Education (NIE) and POSCAR Digital Co., Ltd. have entered a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to launch a digital school system, so-called Wiki School.
The MoU signing ceremony took place yesterday virtually via Zoom under the presidency of H.E. Hang Chuon Naron, Minister of Education, Youth and Sports.
The initiative aims at promoting good governance and e-management at teacher training institutions and schools to further enhance Cambodia’s digital economy and society.

Source: Agence Kampuchea Press

Study: Hypertension Hits Rich, Poor Nations Unevenly

GENEVA – A new study finds the number of people with hypertension has doubled over the last 30 years to 1.28 billion, mostly in developing countries.
The study led by Imperial College London and the World Health Organization is the first comprehensive global analysis of trends in hypertension prevalence, detection, treatment and control.
Data from more than 100 million people aged 30 to 79 in 184 countries showed that more than 700 million people with hypertension, a life-threatening illness, go untreated. Most do so because they are undiagnosed and do not know they have this condition.
Bente Mikkelsen, director of WHO’s department of noncommunicable diseases, said lack of knowledge can have deadly consequences.
“First of all,” Mikkelsen said, “we know that cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of deaths. In the last global health estimates, we know that 17.1 million people are dying from cardiovascular diseases every year. And we know that hypertension is the main reason among those.”
Hypertension significantly increases the risk of heart, brain and kidney diseases and is a leading cause of death worldwide. Major risk factors include unhealthy diets, lack of physical activity, consumption of tobacco and alcohol, and obesity, regarded by some as the tsunami of risk factors.
Besides advocating healthy lifestyles, authors of the report say hypertension can be easily detected by measuring blood pressure and often can be effectively treated with low-cost medications.
Over the past three decades, the study found, the burden of hypertension has shifted from wealthy nations to low-and-middle-income countries. Majid Ezzati, professor of global environmental health at Imperial College London, said that while hypertension has decreased in wealthy nations, it has increased in many of the poorer countries.
“So many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, parts of South Asia, some of the Pacific Island nations, they are still not actually getting the treatment that is needed,” Ezzati said. “So, in an era that we are focusing a lot on equity in treatment — and again, this is something that we have been hearing every day for the past year and a half, inequity in diagnosis, inequity in treatment — this is again something that as a global health community we need to be aware of.”
The study found treatment rates in these regions were below 25 percent for women and 20 percent for men. In comparison, it reported that more than 70 percent of men and women with hypertension in Canada, Iceland and South Korea were likely to receive medication to effectively treat and control this serious medical condition.

Source: Voice of America

Cambodia’s Roadmap on Science, Technology, and Innovation Launched

The Royal Government of Cambodia has launched the ‘Roadmap on Science, Technology, and Innovation 2030’ as part of an effort to grease the country towards upper middle-income status by 2030.
The launching ceremony was held virtually on Aug. 19 under the auspices of H.E. Cham Prasidh, Senior Minister and Minister of Industry, Science, Technology, and Innovation.
The event was attended by Ms. Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), and officials and representatives from relevant government institutions and development partners concerned.
H.E. Cham Prasidh spoke highlight of the efforts of the General Department of Science, Technology and Innovation for compiling the road map through the support from ESCAP and other stakeholders.
“The Roadmap on Science, Technology, and Innovation of Cambodia 2030 is an important strategic policy document to help guide ministries and institutions in implementing policies to achieve the Royal Government’s vision of becoming an upper middle-income economy by 2030 and a high-income country by 2050,” he said.
Ms. Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana stated that the roadmap harnessing the potential of science, technology and innovation will be pivotal for Cambodia to meet the Sustainable Development Goals and build back better from the pandemic with inclusivity, resiliency and sustainability.
“This Roadmap will guide government officials and other key stakeholders on the critical actions required to enhance national STI capabilities and nurture a dynamic innovation ecosystem,” she said.
Cambodia’s STI Roadmap 2030 has five policy strategies: to enhance the governance structure of the STI system, develop the national STI workforce, strengthen research capacity and quality, increase collaboration and linkages between different stakeholders, and foster an enabling ecosystem for innovation.

Source: Agence Kampuchea Press