Ukraine’s Kakhovka dam burst caused widespread devastation, human suffering: WHO

The World Health Organization chief said Thursday that the destruction of Ukraine’s Kakhovka dam caused widespread devastation and human suffering, with one official saying 16,000 people are at immediate risk of flooding. “The impact on the region’s water supply, sanitation systems, and public health services cannot be underestimated,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Ukraine and Russia on Tuesday accused each other of damaging the Kakhovka dam, which led to the flooding of the neighboring settlements. Moscow accused Ukraine of attempting to cut Crimea off the freshwater it receives from the Kakhovka Reservoir, formed by the dam, while Kyiv claimed that Russia tried to slow down an expected counteroffensive. WHO health emergency officer Teresa Zakaria, responding to Anadolu’s question, said: “We have not seen any cases of cholera since the start of the Ukraine war. “We are looking at quite a large population potentially being affected upstream. The dam water serves a population of up to 700,000 people downstream.” ‘Because water continues to come downstream … at the moment, figures show 16,000 people were immediately at risk of flooding on the riverbanks.’ Thousands evacuated Zakaria said thousands of people have been evacuated, and the number is growing. The WHO official said that some of the population is at risk of flooding, while others face disruption in clean water, and less access to food in the coming months “because agricultural lands are rendered completely obsolete.” Asked by a Russian journalist if WHO is serving both Ukrainian and Russians, Mike Ryan, head of WHO’s global emergencies, said that previously the WHO had access to populations on both sides of the conflict when it was within the borders of sovereign Ukraine. “Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we have focused on supporting people with easy access,” said Ryan. He said the WHO is assured by Russian authorities that people under their control are well monitored, cared for, fed, and supported. “We will be delighted to be able to access those areas and be able to monitor health as we would, in most situations, wish to do. But it again will be for the authorities of Ukraine and Russia to agree on how that could be achieved,” said Ryan. “We stand ready at any time to deploy to support civilians affected by conflict anywhere in the world. But we can only do that with the support and acceptance of the conflicting parties in this situation.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

Pedagogical Academy Park to become model in water management, Commissioner says

The Commissioner for the Environment, Maria Panayiotou, said that the Pedagogical Academy National Forest Park in Nicosia is set to become a model in terms of water management.

In a press release issued on the occasion of the World Environment Day, which is celebrated on June 5th every year, the Commissioner notes that this day ”is an opportunity to highlight our commitment to addressing the environmental challenges facing our planet and to recognise the urgent need for action and cooperation to protect our planet for future generations.”

Furthermore, the Office of the Commissioner for the Environment announces together with the Department of Forests the launch of a project aimed at establishing the Pedagogical Academy National Forest Park in Nicosia as a model park in water management.

”Through this project we are proving in practice that we are moving from words to actions and highlighting the park as a model for optimal water management, encouraging the efficient use and protection of water resources,” the press release adds.

”With these initiatives, the Office of the Commissioner for the Environment seeks to promote sustainable development, sustainable management of natural resources and protection of the environment for future generations,” the press release concludes.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

War-battered Afghanistan struggles with health problems

Afghanistan is facing a number of health problems, including eye problems and the crippling disease polio, in addition to the poisoning of girls at a primary school, local media reported.

Children, particularly girls, struggle with sight problems as they face an uncertain future and endure social isolation in Uruzgan, southern Afghanistan. Residents with this eye disease ‘must seek treatment abroad, as it cannot be provided within the country,’ according to Tolo News based in the capital, Kabul. Tolo did not name the disease in question.

After acquiring the necessary permits from the interim Health Ministry, a medical team supported by Australia treated hundreds of blind individuals in Uruzgan.

Meanwhile, residents of the eastern Nangarhar province are urging more polio vaccination campaigns. According to a UNICEF official, unvaccinated children are more prone to contracting polio, as a fourth case was recently reported in Nangarhar. ‘Nangarhar and all the eastern zones of the country are in danger of polio,’ said the ministry. Poliovirus is the cause of the crippling and potentially fatal disease.

Separately, about 80 girls in primary schools in the Sar-e-Pul province in northern Afghanistan have been hospitalized after being poisoned.

Afghanistan, a war-battered country, has a weak infrastructure and health system, especially since 2021, after being taken over by the Taliban.

Source: Anadolu Agency

EU Digital COVID Certificate to become global

EU Commissioner for Health, Stella Kyriakides, and WHO Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, will be officially launching the adoption and scaling up of the EU Digital COVID Certificate to the global level in Geneva in a meeting on Monday, the Cyprus News Agency has learned.

In practice, this means that the digital certificate which has become a global standard and is used by almost 80 EU and non-EU countries today, will become a tool for global cooperation on digital health policy.

More specifically, WHO is due to take up the technical framework of the EU Digital COVID Certificate as of 1 July 2023, in order to establish a new global system in digital health documentation, under the new WHO Global Digital Health Certification Network.

The aim of the initiative is for the tool to help address ongoing and future health threats, especially in case of a new international or global pandemic, as well as facilitate mobility and help deliver better public health for citizens worldwide.

The certificate was developed in record time during the most difficult period of the COVID-19 pandemic and contributed to the effort by member states to reopen their economies and societies safely.

Commissioner Kyriakides and Dr Adhanom Ghebreyesus had signed on December 2nd 2022 an agreement to deepen strategic cooperation between the EU and WHO, to strengthen the role of the WHO in the global health architecture, and promote the priorities of the EU Global Health Strategy.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Eurostat: A small percentage of children have unmet medical needs in Cyprus

Cyprus is one of the countries with the lowest percentages of children under 16 living in a household as dependants that had unmet medical needs in 2021, according to data released by Eurostat, the statistical service of the EU. However, when it came to unmet medical needs regarding dental care, the relevant percentage in Cyprus was slightly higher than the EU average.

In 2021, 1.5% of children below 16 years old in households with children in Cyprus, had unmet medical needs (3.6% in the EU), indicating an increase of 0.1% percentage points (pp) since the last report in 2017 (1.4%). On the EU level there was an increase of 2 pp compared to 2017 (1.6%).

The share of dependant children with unmet medical needs in Cyprus was higher (3.5%) for children living in households with one adult, but slightly lower at 1.3 for households with two or more adults.

The same trends appear on an ?U level, with 5.3% for children living in households with one adult having unmet medical needs. The corresponding percentage was also slightly lower for households with two or more adults compared to the overall share of dependant children, at 3.4%.

Among EU members, the highest shares of children with unmet medical needs living in households with children were reported in Poland (7.3%) and Latvia (6.4%), followed by Hungary and Romania (both 4.7%), and Spain (4.6%).

In contrast, the lowest shares were reported in Austria (0.3%) and Luxembourg (0.4%), followed by Croatia (0.9%), and Malta, Lithuania, and Cyprus (all with 1.5% each).

Unmet needs in dental care

In 2021, the situation for dental care was similar though slightly worse than the unmet medical needs in both Cyprus and the EU level.

More specifically, 4.7% of children in Cyprus living in households with dependant children (4.4% in the EU) didn’t receive the dental care they needed. This percentage marked an increase by 1.6 pp in Cyprus compared to 2017 (3.1%) and an increase of 1.8 pp on the EU level (2.6%).

Looking at data for all EU countries, 11 registered a percentage of children with unmet dental care needs above the EU average, including in Cyprus.

This percentage was higher in households with one adult, with 7.5% of these children in Cyprus (7.1% in the EU) not receiving the dental care they needed. Meanwhile, 4.5% of the children living in households with two or more adults in Cyprus (4.0% in the EU) had unmet needs for dental care treatment.

In 2021, among the EU members, the highest shares of children with unmet needs for dental care living in households with children were registered in Latvia (7.7%), followed by Spain (7.1%), Hungary (7.0%), Slovenia (6.8%), and Portugal (6.4%).

At the bottom of the scale, the lowest shares were registered in Luxembourg (0.6%), Croatia (0.8%), Sweden (1.1%), and Austria and Italy (both with 1.2%).

Source: Cyprus News Agency

PSG goalkeeper Sergio Rico admitted to hospital after horseback riding accident

Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) goalkeeper Sergio Rico was taken to a hospital in Spain on Sunday with a “serious injury” after a horseback riding accident that resulted in head trauma.

Spain’s EFE news agency reported that Rico, 29, suffered a “serious head injury after falling from a horse” in Huelva, and was then kicked by the horse once on the ground.

PSG secured a record 11th French league title after a 1-1 draw at Strasbourg on Saturday, with Rico among the substitutes.

He had gone to the pilgrimage of El Rocio in Huelva city, in southwestern Spain, where the incident occurred.

“Paris Saint-Germain learned of the accident involving its player Sergio Rico on Sunday and remains in constant contact with his loved ones. The entire Red and Blue community offers them its full support,” the French champions said on Twitter.

Rico’s former clubs, Sevilla and Fulham, wished him a speedy recovery in separate tweets.

Rico helped Sevilla win three UEFA Europa League titles from 2014 to 2016 before moving to PSG.

He won three French Ligue 1 titles with Paris in 2020, 2022, and 2023, as well as two French Cups in 2020 and 2021.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Eurozone factory activity slows – SandP Global

Manufacturing activity across the 20 countries that use the euro has declined at its fastest pace since the Covid-19 pandemic, amid a widening gap in global demand for goods and services, according to a study by SandP Global.

Published on Tuesday, the report showed that the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for manufacturing dropped to 44.6 in May from 45.8 in April, and further below the 50-mark separating growth from contraction. A similar gauge of services fell to a two-month low, though its reading of 55.9 still signaled robust expansion.

The outperformance of services relative to manufacturing was the widest since January 2009, data showed.

Growth expansion in May was led by the Eurozone’s largest economy, Germany, where output grew at the sharpest rate for 13 months, albeit confined to services. According to SandP, the biggest expansion of service sector output since August 2021 was countered by the sharpest fall in German goods production for six months.

France, the euro area’s second-largest economy, saw growth slip to its lowest in the current four-month span of expansion, with weakened service sector growth accompanied by a further marked drop in goods production.

Eurozone inflation accelerates

While the rest of the region as a whole reported growth for the fifth month in a row, expansion cooled to its lowest since February due to slower services growth and an increasingly steep fall in manufacturing output, the study found.

“GDP is likely to have grown in the second quarter thanks to the healthy state of the services sector,” Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank, said in a statement. “However, the manufacturing sector is a powerful drag on the momentum of the economy as a whole. German companies from this sector are particularly hard on the brakes,” he added.

According to the economist, the European Central Bank (ECB) will “have a headache” with the PMI price data because selling prices in the services sector actually rose more than in the previous month. “It is precisely price developments in this sector that the ECB is watching with a wary eye,” de la Rubia explained, adding the “upward movement that can still be observed here is keeping the central bank from taking an interest rate pause.”

Source: Russia Today

Cyprus ready to join forces for global health, Minister says

Minister of Health Popi Kanari expressed Cyprus’ readiness to collaborate with the World Health Organisation (WHO) partners in safeguarding health and prosperity of the citizens on a global level.

Speaking during the WHO’s 76th World Health Summit, Kanari referred to the Organization’s significant achievements such as eliminating smallpox and the successful vaccinations against poliomyelitis while she praised WHO’s role in tackling the Covid-19 pandemic.

Kanaris referred to the significant issues facing humanity which call for collective action, such as the impact of climate change on health and ensuring access to health services on a global scale.

The Cypriot Minister also agreed with the need for concluding a wider treaty on tackling pandemics so that would so that the international community would be able to timely and effectively manage a possible new pandemic.

She also outlined on Cyprus’ national actions and priorities in the health sector.

On the assembly’s sidelines, Kanari held separate meetings with her Maltese counterpart, Chris Fearne and the WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

With Fearne, Kanari discussed the issue of advancing bilateral relations between the two countries in the field of Health mainly on issues of antimicrobial resistance and safeguarding medicine availability. They also discussed the issue of cooperation with regard to challenges facing the two countries’ health systems.

In her meeting with the WHO chief, Kanari discussed the WHO Office in Cyprus priorities and the challenges in the field of health.

Ghebreyesus assured on the organisation’s and his own personal support in the efforts of the WHO Cyprus office to achieve its targets.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Ireland to introduce alcohol label health warning

The Republic of Ireland is set to introduce health warning labels on alcohol products.

Stephen Donnelly, the Irish minister for health, signed new regulations into law on Monday but they will not come into force until 2026.

Labelling will warn consumers about the risks of drinking alcohol as well as providing a product’s calorie content and the number of grams of alcohol.

The Irish government said the regulations would bring alcohol products into line with requirements for food packaging.

Mr Donnelly said: “I welcome that we are the first country in the world to take this step and introduce comprehensive health labelling of alcohol products.

“I look forward to other countries following our example.”

Consumers will be warned about the dangers of drinking while pregnant as well as the risks of liver disease and fatal cancers.

In January, Italy’s ambassador to Ireland told Irish broadcaster RTÉ that the plans were “totally disproportionate”.

Wine production remains a major export industry in Italy.

Ruggero Corrias said: “There is nothing wrong with the warnings, the point is the warnings should be proportionate and, in this case, since you’re talking about wine, saying that drinking alcohol on a bottle of wine causes liver disease is totally disproportionate.”

Dr Sheila Gilheany, the chief executive of Alcohol Action Ireland, welcomed the regulation.

She said: “This measure goes some way to ensuring consumers are informed about some of the risks from alcohol.”

Source: BBC

Germany struggles to recruit rural doctors

For my father it was not just a job, but a calling, said Stefan Lichtinghagen. For 32 years, his father led a successful family doctor’s practice in Marienheide, a municipality with a population of 14,000 about 50 kilometers (30 miles) northeast of Cologne.

About 20 years ago, he was looking for someone to take it over, and it ended up being his son, who, as a specialist in internal medicine and gastroenterology, initially had a different plan for his life.

“My father was really on the go from morning until evening,” the doctor said with a smile. “I saw him very little and always thought to myself: ‘you don’t want to have a job like that.’ Now it turns out that I work almost as much.”

50-hour weeks, but as his own boss

On the day DW met him, Lichtinghagen had diagnosed a 20-year-old with appendicitis, treated a neighborhood friend with respiratory problems and tended to a 91-year-old’s head wound.

With 3,300 patients and house calls to deal with, it easily adds up to a 50-hour working week — but he has never regretted his decision.

“My colleagues are put off this type of work because of the bureaucratic hurdles,” he said, referring to the documentation and administrative work required, “but with your own practice you’re your own boss, free to arrange things as you like.”

Increasingly few young doctors in Germany want to become general practitioners in rural communities. According to a study by the Robert Bosch Foundation, 11,000 family doctor positions are expected to be unfilled by the year 2035.

That has severe consequences for Germany and especially its rural areas: 40% of which are threatened by the lack of doctor. The trend is rising because every third family doctor in Germany is currently older than 60 and therefore soon to retire.

Politicians in Germany, a country that prides itself on its healthcare service, are desperately trying to counteract this and entice doctors into the countryside with money. German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach is calling for 5,000 additional places in medical schools to allow for adequate care of the aging population. The German health ministry has earmarked €23 billion ($25 billion) across various projects for tackling the shortage of rural doctors.

Pilot project for rural doctor training quota

A so-called “rural doctor quota” has been introduced in nine of Germany’s 16 states. It means that up to 10% of places in medical schools would come under the condition that graduates work for 10 years in a region that is facing shortages. Candidates do not even need to have received good marks in their final high school examinations.

Even Lichtinghagen, who was initially skeptical about the quota, now considers it a first step in the right direction. “We need to do something: Specialists can be organized in a different way, but the system can’t work without family doctors. I’m surprised that there isn’t a bigger public outcry over this,” he said.

To understand more about how important family doctors are, one must travel 100 kilometers south from Lichtinghagen’s practice — to Klaus Korte in the municipality of Ahrbrück. The general practitioner was perhaps the most important doctor in Germany two years ago, when 134 people were killed and hundreds injured during catastrophic flooding in the Ahr Valley. Korte’s practice was also destroyed in the flooding, and the doctor provided emergency care for six weeks at a makeshift center set up at a school.

“To be a family doctor is the most wonderful thing that I can imagine,” Korte told DW. “The people of this region have grown close to my heart over the past 20 years, even more so in the two years since the flood. These thousands of fates on the river have woven us together in a completely new way.”

That goes as far as patients remaining loyal to him as their doctor, even though they now live in emergency accommodation more than 100 kilometers away.

When Korte began his practice 20 years ago, five family doctors served the area. Now there are two, he said.

The significance of ‘goalkeepers’

Klaus Korte is familiar with the prejudices that continue to circulate about general practitioners. There are colleagues who disparagingly speak of them as second-class doctors. Korte laughs it off: for him, family doctors are the “goalkeepers,” who, like the gloved football players, must always be vigilant and careful.

“There is no senior physician or specialist here that you can ask. We need to make the correct decisions to avert severe consequences, such as with cardiovascular diseases or the detection of tumors. Of course, we do not do invasive medicine or intensive care, but you can save lives in the family doctor’s office, and many do.”

There is also the element of familiarity: Klaus Korte said that he can treat his patients in a unique way because, for instance, he knows someone’s father died of cancer three years ago, or because he knows that someone’s sister ended up in a psychiatric ward with anorexia. And because he, too, witnessed the energy-sapping neighborhood dispute. His plea: Germany urgently needs to do more to combat the rural doctor shortage.

“There is no other branch of medicine where you are as close to the people as the family doctor. It is the foundation, and if the foundation is missing, the building above will collapse.”

Source: Deutsche Welle