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Category: Health

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Post event press release of Kolkata roadshow held on 7th March, 2025

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 07 MAR 2025 6:29PM by PIB Delhi

    The Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (MDoNER) hosted the North East Trade and Investment Roadshow in Kolkata today. The roadshow evoked strong interest from potential investors who are eager to explore opportunities in the North Eastern States. The event was attended by the Hon’ble Minister of State for MDoNER & Ministry of Education, Dr. Sukanta Majumdar, along with senior officials from MDoNER, North Eastern Council and North Eastern States. The event marked another milestone in a series of successful roadshows across India and showcased the untapped potential of the North East India.

    Hon’ble Minister of State, MDoNER while addressing the Kolkata Roadshow highlighted the immense potential of North Eastern region. Sharing the vision of Hon’ble Prime Minister, he explained how North Eastern States offers great aspects for investment opportunities and building a “Viksit Bharat” together.

     He highlighted the major development initiatives in the infrastructure sector that have taken place in the North Eastern Region under the leadership of Hon’ble Prime Minister during the last 10 years, inter-alia, including expanding air, road and rail connectivity, waterways etc.  He also underlined that each of the eight states of the North East embodies unique strengths, resources and opportunities, making the region an invaluable asset in India’s growth story. From its rich cultural diversity to its natural beauty and strategic location, the North Eastern Region holds immense potential to emerge as one of the country’s leading economic powerhouses. Its proximity to Southeast Asia also positions the North Eastern Region as a gateway to South East Asian countries, aligning perfectly with India’s Act East Policy.

    He further stated that this roadshow serves as a vital platform for fostering policies that empower industries, attract investments and create an ecosystem conducive to sustainable growth, with key focus on areas like like IT & ITES, Healthcare, Agri and allied, Education & Skill Development, Sports & Entertainment, Tourism & Hospitality, Infrastructure and logistics; Textiles, Handlooms and Handicrafts and Energy. By forging stronger ties between Kolkata and the North East, it is aimed to create a synergy that leverages the strengths of both regions, fostering mutual growth and prosperity. He invited the dynamic business community of Kolkata to explore the potential of North Eastern Region and consider the North East not only as an investment destination but also as a region with a unique story and limitless potential. In his concluding remarks he invited investors to the North Eastern Region and play a key role in shaping the future of the region.

    Shri Dharmvir Jha, Statistical Adviser, MDoNER in his address on advantage North East and Opportunities for Investment and Trade emphasized that North Eastern Region has rich untapped potential. He informed that during the last 10 years there is a remarkable improvement in connectivity to the North Eastern Region whether it’s air, rail, road or waterways. Over the past decade, the government has successfully completed numerous pending projects, benefiting local communities and millions of people through various schemes/initiatives. He also highlighted the opportunities in the region in various sectors like IT & ITES, Healthcare, Agri and allied, Education & Skill Development, Sports & Entertainment, Tourism & Hospitality, Infrastructure and logistics; Textiles, Handlooms and Handicrafts and Energy. He stated that with ample opportunities across multiple sectors, North East India welcomes investors to explore its vast potential and be part of its growth journey.

    The representative of Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), under the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, gave a detailed presentation on the UNNATI Scheme, providing attendees with a comprehensive understanding of its benefits and associated incentives. He underlined that the UNNATI Scheme offers incentives to attract investors and manufacturing companies, supports the ‘Act East Policy,’ and promotes domestic manufacturing and services to reduce import dependence and enhance exports.

    Senior officials representing the North Eastern States shared actionable insights into emerging opportunities across various sectors. The Kolkata roadshow drew strong participation from industry leaders, further reinforcing the investment appeal of North East India. The event also featured several B2G meetings, providing investors with a platform to discuss their investment plans in the North Eastern Region. During the roadshow, investment interests of worth INR 12,516 cr were received in the form of intents/ MoUs.

    The Kolkata roadshow concluded on a positive note, with participants expressing keen interest in exploring collaborative ventures in the North Eastern Region. The event not only fostered meaningful dialogue but also laid the groundwork for future partnerships, driving economic growth and sustainable development in the region.

    *****

    Samrat/Dheeraj/Allein

    (Release ID: 2109184) Visitor Counter : 52

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Latest news – 8 March 2025 – International Women’s day – Committee on Public Health

    Source: European Parliament

    Celebrated annually as a focal point in the women’s rights movement, international Women’s Day gives focus to issues such as gender equality, reproductive rights, and violence and abuse against women.

    This year’s theme “For ALL Women and Girls: Rights. Equality. Empowerment”, calls for action that can unlock equal rights, power and opportunities for all and a feminist future where no one is left behind. Central to this vision is empowering the next generation–youth, particularly young women and adolescent girls–as catalysts for lasting change.

    Committee on Public Health has published public consultation on Women’s health (link below).

    The purpose of this consultation is to collect YOUR experiences, suggestions and opinions. Your input will feed into the work of SANT Committee and form the basis for forthcoming work on Women’s Health.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Lack of a group project on health and the Commissioner for Health and Animal Welfare’s absence from the group on the preparedness union – E-000146/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    1. The Commission coordinates internally on all policy and initiatives. With respect to key cross-cutting initiatives, the President of the Commission has decided to set up project groups. She may decide to renew them or set other project groups.

    2. The composition of the project group on Preparedness Union reflects the approach in addressing the policy challenge at hand — developing a more integrated, anticipatory and proactive crisis management mode at EU level. Other Members of the College may participate in relevant meetings of the group and contribute to its work.

    3. The Political Guidelines for 2024-2029[1] and the mission letter of Commissioner for Health and Animal Welfare[2] set out the priorities on health policy. These include work to complete the European Health Union, by further diversifying supply chains, improving access to the most advanced treatments, boosting the competitiveness, resilience and security of health systems and working on strategic inventories. The Commission is working on a Proposal for a Critical Medicines Act to address shortages of medicines and reduce dependencies relating to critical medicines and ingredients, as well as to ensure the security of supply of medicines. The Commission will also step up work on preventive health, in particular for mental health, including at work, and cardiovascular diseases. On all these aspects, it will ensure internal coordination by relying on the processes that are best suited to each situation.

    • [1] https://commission.europa.eu/document/download/e6cd4328-673c-4e7a-8683-f63ffb2cf648_en?filename=Political%20Guidelines%202024-2029_EN.pdf
    • [2] https://commission.europa.eu/about/organisation/college-commissioners/oliver-varhelyi_en
    Last updated: 7 March 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Province Invests $3.5 Million to Support New Ronald McDonald House in Prince Albert

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Released on March 7, 2025

    Saskatchewan Families with Sick Children to Have a Place to Stay, Close to their Child’s Side

    Today, the Government of Saskatchewan announced $3.5 million in funding to Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) to help build the first ever Ronald McDonald House in Prince Albert. 

    “This new Ronald McDonald House will offer comfort, affordability and convenience to Saskatchewan families with sick children who travel to Prince Albert for treatment,” Premier Scott Moe said. “I am grateful that our province can help create a space where families feel supported and cared for, a true home away from home.” 

    The Ronald McDonald Home in Prince Albert will support families whose children are undergoing treatments at nearby health care facilities. The design includes 12 bedrooms, a smudge room, communal kitchen, dining room, living room, play space and family games room.

    “The support to build the Ronald McDonald House – Prince Albert will ensure that families traveling to the Victoria Hospital in Prince Albert, for the health care of their child or children, have a place to stay, close to their child’s side,” Chief Executive Officer of RMHC Saskatchewan Tammy Forrester said. “This historic capital investment by the Government of Saskatchewan into Ronald McDonald House Charities Saskatchewan is an investment into all Saskatchewan families.” 

    The new facility will be built on 5.6 acres located at 791 25th Street West in Prince Albert.

    Families across the province have stayed at the Ronald McDonald House in Saskatoon. The Trudel family have experienced firsthand what the home offers. 

    “Staying at the Ronald McDonald House felt like home, in fact, when we eventually left, we missed it,” Shianne Trudel said.

    Construction of the Ronald McDonald House Charities Prince Albert will begin late spring 2025 and is expected to be completed in early 2027. 

    Last month, the government announced $6.5 million to help build a 20-bedroom Ronald McDonald House in Regina, bringing the total provincial funding to RMHC to $10 million. 

    RMHC Saskatchewan was founded in 1985. RMHC currently operates two programs in Saskatchewan with Ronald McDonald House in Saskatoon and Family Room in Prince Albert. Approximately 29,800 Saskatchewan families have been served by these programs. 

    -30-

    For more information, contact:

    Media Desk 
    Health
    Regina
    Phone: 306-787-4083
    Email: media@health.gov.sk.ca

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Solving the Nursing Shortage: Governor Shapiro Visits Temple University Health System to Highlight Investments in Nurse Training to Grow Pennsylvania’s Health Care Workforce

    Source: US State of Pennsylvania

    March 06, 2025 – Philadelphia, PA

    Solving the Nursing Shortage: Governor Shapiro Visits Temple University Health System to Highlight Investments in Nurse Training to Grow Pennsylvania’s Health Care Workforce

    Governor Josh Shapiro and Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry (L&I) Secretary Nancy A. Walker visited Temple Women & Families – part of Temple University Health System (TUHS) – to highlight the investments included in the Governor’s 2025-26 budget proposal aimed at tackling Pennsylvania’s nursing shortage and strengthening the Commonwealth’s health care workforce.

    The Governor’s budget proposal includes a first-time state-level investment of $5 million to create the Nurse Shortage Assistance Program, which will provide funding to hospitals that partner with nursing schools to cover tuition costs for students who commit to a three-year work placement at Pennsylvania hospitals after graduation. This initiative aims to build a pipeline of trained nursing professionals- boosting retention, limiting turnover, and helping maintain a skilled health care workforce that delivers high-quality care all across the Commonwealth.

    “We need to take action now to address Pennsylvania’s nursing shortage, and my budget makes strategic investments to do just that,” said Governor Shapiro. “By expanding education programs, providing tuition assistance, and strengthening workforce pipelines, we can ensure hospitals have the skilled professionals they need to deliver high-quality patient care. We know this model of tuition assistance works, and for the first time ever, we are proposing to help nursing students with an investment of state dollars that not only gives them peace of mind but creates a pipeline of new, highly trained nurses for our communities.”

    List of Speakers:
    Michael Young, President and CEO of TUHS
    Governor Shapiro
    Carter Short, Chief Nursing Executive of TUHS Chaudron
    Maura Cabry,senior nursing student
    Nancy A. Walker, L&I Secretary

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Shapiro Administration Leaders Encourage Postpartum Depression Screenings for All Pennsylvania Mothers, Call for Faster Referrals to Mental Health Services

    Source: US State of Pennsylvania

    March 06, 2025 – Pittsburgh, PA

    Shapiro Administration Leaders Encourage Postpartum Depression Screenings for All Pennsylvania Mothers, Call for Faster Referrals to Mental Health Services

    Shapiro Administration officials from the departments of Human Services (DHS), Health (DOH),and Drugs and Alcohol Programs (DDAP) highlighted Governor Josh Shapiro’s proposal in this year’s budget to implement universal postpartum depression screenings for all Pennsylvania moms.

    During a visit to the Allegheny Health Network’s (AHN) Alexis Joy D’Achille Center for Perinatal Mental Health, leaders shared how postpartum depression can occur weeks and months after childbirth, where mothers experience a broad range of symptoms including but not limited to sadness, hopelessness, anxiety, change in appetite, difficulty in sleep, mood swings and thoughts of self-harm that may make it difficult to carry out daily tasks, including caring for themselves and their babies. Postpartum depression affects one in eight mothers across the country. It not only impacts the well-being of Pennsylvania mothers, but also has profound effects on their families and communities.

    “For more than two decades, as a pediatrician, I worked with new mothers and their babies and saw firsthand the impact pregnancy-related depression has on women and their families,” said Secretary of Health Dr. Debra Bogen. “Implementing universal postpartum depression screenings and referrals to evidence-based treatment options for all Pennsylvania mothers is a meaningful action we can take to ensure women receive the care they need during a critical time in their lives.”

    Speakers Include:
    Dr. Brian Johnson, AHN West Penn Hospital President
    Steven D’Achille, President of the Alexis Joy D’Achille Foundation
    Dr. Debra Bogen, DOH Secretary
    Sara Goulet, DHS Special Advisor
    Kelly Primus, DDAP Deputy Secretary
    Dr. Ewurama Sackey, AHN Medical Director of the Women’s Behavioral Health, Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Institute
    Dr. Priya Gopalan, Chief of Psychiatry for UPMC Magree-Womens Hospital
    Jessica Tucker, Patient at the Alexis Joy D’Achille Center for Perinatal Mental Health

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Future Doctors Present Scholarly Capstone Projects

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    On March 7 over one hundred fourth-year medical students presented their capstone scholarly projects at the annual Clinician Scholar Symposium at UConn School of Medicine.

    The student presentations are a special part of the culmination of their medical school journey as they march toward UConn Health’s 54th Commencement on May 12 to receive their medical degrees.

    The event’s keynote address was delivered by UConn School of Medicine alum Margaret K. Callahan, MD, Ph.D., who now serves as the chief of the Division of Hematology/Oncology at UConn Health and the Neag Comprehensive Cancer Center. She spoke about the power of immunotherapy for cancer patients and beyond.

    “I’m delighted to be back at UConn as a clinician scientist. My time here as a student was foundational in building this career – from clinical skills to research skills to my early interest in cancer immunotherapy – it all started here,” shared Callahan.

    The soon-to-be future Dr. Cailyn Regan presenting her novel capstone project study findings in the Academic Rotunda on March 7.

    “We are thrilled that the UConn medical school community came out to support our graduating fourth-year students as they disseminated their scholarly work. We have had really great projects and presentations. We wish them continued success,” said co-chair of the Clinician Scholar Symposium Stefan Brocke, MD, Ph.D.

    “Thank you to all the faculty mentors for making the successful journey of our medical students and their capstone projects possible,” said Jeffrey Pella, Ph.D., MSc., also co-chair of the Symposium.

    One of the fourth-year student capstone presenters was Cailyn Regan, 26, of West Hartford. Her project focused on infertility which is widespread in the U.S. impacting approximately 15 percent of couples. She explored “Lutei nizing hormone (LH) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) stimulate ovulation in an epiregulin (EREG)-dependent manner.” Her faculty mentor was Lisa Mehlmann, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Cell Biology.

    “My project helped to highlight previously unexplored feedback loops in the ovulatory process. Research like this can expose new targets to explore for future treatment of infertility, IVF, or other hormonal disorders,” says Regan. “Reproductive health is an area of medicine that interacts with both the clinical status and livelihoods of patients. Being able to appreciate and explore both the scientific and humanistic sides of medicine is a pillar I’ve always tried to align myself with.”

    Regan’s capstone project presentation has been a long time coming.

    Fourth-year UConn medical student Cailyn Regan of West Hartford.

    “It’s surreal knowing that presenting my capstone that I’ve been working on for years is the only thing that stands between me and graduation. It’s been a long road but an enriching one,” she reports.

    Regan is looking forward to National Match Day on March 21 with her fellow classmates in the Class of 2025 and hopes to be beginning her journey with a match to a surgical residency, likely with research years.

    As she presented her capstone findings, Regan’s father Dr. Thomas Regan, assistant dean for Admissions and Student Affairs and an emergency medicine physician at UConn Health, beamed with pride.

    “She’s the best, she knows the information, and gave a phenomenal presentation,” he exclaimed.

    Double Husky Maxime Braun, 27, of Simsbury presented her capstone on “Artificial Intelligence Screening of Computed Tomography Images for Identification of Findings Requiring STAT Read by a Radiologist.” Associate professor of radiology Dr. Michael Baldwin served as her faculty mentor.

    UConn medical school’s Class of 2025’s Maxime Braun of Simsbury.

    “Throughout my time in medical school, artificial intelligence (AI) has become a much more prominent presence in society, academia, and medicine. During my training, AI not only arrived on the scene but seems to have become ever more pervasive in day-to-day life. The role of AI seems to be questioned most heavily within the field of radiology,” Braun says.

    Braun conducted research into the developments of AI use within the field as she hopes to pursue a diagnostic radiology residency training program and a future career in radiology.

    “My research into the relationship between AI and the radiologist has led to my discovery of a few AI-driven tools that I had no previous knowledge of,” Braun reports. “A few of these screening modules that I have witnessed first-hand can detect breast lesions on mammograms, lung nodules on low-dose chest CT scans and, of course, large vessel occlusions on CT angiograms of the head and neck. While this project has certainly not wholly clarified the relationship between AI and radiology, it has confirmed that it is a highly effective triaging tool that increases efficiency for patient care.”

    Braun adds, “As a future radiologist I am motivated to continue to investigate this relationship; it will be important to keep up with the development of AI as it will inevitably keep intertwining with the field.”

    Maxime Braun, fourth-year UConn med student, presenting her capstone findings.

    Braun’s conclusion about the Clinician Scholar Symposium: “It was remarkable witnessing and celebrating all that our class has accomplished. It’s pretty incredible how fast the past 4 years seemed to go by even when, at times, it felt like such a long road ahead. What I love most about UConn are the people I have met along the way. I will cherish the relationships I have formed with professors, mentors, staff, and life-long friends.”

    Congrats to the future Dr. Regan, Dr. Braun, and all the future UConn-made doctors on their successful capstones!

    Dr. Melissa Held, senior associate dean for Medical Student Education concluded, “This is one of my very favorite days of the year. I am incredibly impressed. Congratulations!”

    UConn Health’s Dr. Thomas Regan looks on as his daughter Cailyn Regan presents her final capstone project and follows in his footsteps to become a physician.

    Additional information on the event and the presented capstones.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: NEW REPORT: Working-Class Americans Can Expect to Die at Least 7 Years Earlier than the Wealthy

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Vermont – Bernie Sanders
    WASHINGTON, March 7 – Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP), today released a new report exposing the stark disparities in life expectancy based on income, education, race and geography. The findings show that working class people in America die much younger than the wealthiest people in our country.
    The new analysis reveals that people living in the top 1% of counties ranked by median household income live seven years longer, on average, than Americans living in the bottom 50% of counties.
    “The massive income and wealth inequality that exists in America today is not just an economic issue, it is literally a matter of life and death,” said Sanders. “In America today, the bottom 50% of our population can expect to live seven years shorter lives than the top 1%. Even worse, Americans who live in working-class, rural counties can expect to die 10 years younger than people who live in wealthier neighborhoods across the country. The enormous stress of living paycheck to paycheck not only causes far too many Americans to die much quicker than they should, but also leads to higher levels of anxiety, depression, cardiovascular disease and poor health. This is an issue that Congress must address.”
    Here are the key findings from the report:
    Wealthy Americans live longer than the working class. People living in the top 1% of counties ranked by median household income live an average of 84.3 years, while people living in the bottom 50% of counties ranked by median household income live an average of 77.4 years – a difference of 7 years.
    Rural counties face the greatest disparities. Urban and suburban counties with a median household income of $100,000 have an average life expectancy of 81.6 years, while small rural counties with a median household income of $30,000 have an average life expectancy of 71.7 years – a 10-year gap.
    Geographic disparities persist. In Loudoun County, Virginia, the highest-earning county in the U.S., life expectancy is 84 years. Just 350 miles away, in McDowell County, West Virginia, one of the lowest-earning counties in the U.S., the life expectancy is 69 years – a 15-year difference.
    Higher incomes translate to longer lives. Among rural counties, a $10,000 increase in median annual household income is associated with an additional 2.6 years of life expectancy. Among lower- and lower-middle income populations in urban and suburban counties, the same income increase is associated with a 2.1-year gain in life expectancy.
    Through a survey shared on social media, Sanders recently asked working people how stress impacts their lives. The response was overwhelming. Americans shared stories that paint a picture of daily hardship: the stress of affording health care, food, and gas; the anxiety of living paycheck to paycheck; and the feeling of hopelessness that comes from constant financial strain.
    Here are just two of those responses.
    Edwardo from Texas said: “We struggle to get sleep. Our diets fluctuate, and we get sick from spoiled food from the donation pantry. Working long hours I was recently injured and am struggling, unable to pay for care to help heal.”
    Caitlan from Colorado said: “Stress isn’t just an inconvenience for me—it’s a direct threat to my heart. Living with a congenital heart defect and multiple mechanical valves means that every surge of anxiety, every sleepless night worrying about bills, isn’t just mentally exhausting—it physically wears on my heart. Stress triggers palpitations, spikes my blood pressure, and leaves me drained, knowing that too much of it could lead to serious complications. Managing it is a daily battle.”
    The report released today also describes policy solutions that would support working Americans and make progress toward closing the life expectancy gap, including:
    Raising the minimum wage to at least $17 an hour to ensure workers can earn a living wage.
    Guaranteeing health care as a human right by enacting Medicare for All.
    Ending the international embarrassment of the United States being the only major country on earth not to guarantee paid family and medical leave.
    Making education from child care to trade school and graduate school available to everyone regardless of their income or ZIP code.
    Expanding Social Security and restoring defined benefit pension plans so that every senior in America can retire with dignity.
    Read the report here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Employment – Veterinary nurses file historic pay equity claim on International Working Women’s Day

    Source: First Union

    Today, on International Working Women’s Day, FIRST Union is proud to announce that a pay equity claim has been raised with employers on behalf of hundreds of veterinary nurses who work for private providers across Aotearoa.
    “As a primarily female-dominated profession, veterinary nurses are historically underpaid and socially undervalued – this must change, and it begins with fair pay,” said Sheryl Cadman, FIRST Union central regional secretary.
    “Most vet nurses currently earn around $25 per hour – more than $2 below the current living wage – and the industry as a whole is massively struggling with the recruitment of new vet nurses and the retention of experienced workers,” said Ms Cadman.
    “Typically, the vet nurses who care for our pets and livestock can expect to start on minimum wage after completing a 2-year diploma or 3-year bachelor’s degree.”
    The Boehringer Ingelheim whitepaper also showed that 41% of veterinary nurses expect to leave the industry within five years, and only 26% expect to stay until retirement.
    Jasmin Searle, an Auckland-based senior veterinary nurse and practice manager who has worked in the industry for almost eight years, said that many of her colleagues have chosen to leave the profession due to rising burnout and mental health pressures, stemming from a large workload and insufficient staffing levels.
    “I love my job, but I’ve almost walked away from it before,” said Ms Searle. “The combination of poor pay, poor working conditions, and a lack of support led to six resignations within 18 months at my previous clinic.”
    “It’s historically considered a ‘caring’ role that relies on soft skills and has been classed as women’s work, leading to major pay disparities with comparable professions and a misunderstanding of what our jobs actually involve.”
    “Veterinary nurses are responsible for the majority of a patient’s care – everything from anaesthesia and intubation to X-rays, bloodwork and the administration of IVs.”
    “The vast majority of vet nurses who leave the industry do so because they’re heading for Australia, where the pay is better, or they’re leaving the industry altogether because it’s simply not sustainable to operate under so much stress in the long-term for such little pay.”
    Ms Cadman said that the majority of veterinary practices are owned by large companies like Vetpartners, Vetlife, Pet Doctors and Animates, who are private entities competing on wages and conditions with each other. According to a 2020 Companion Animals in New Zealand (CANZ) report, the country has the second highest proportion of pet ownership in the world.
    “We’re a nation of pet lovers but we are not valuing the skilled workers who are there for us and our friends in their time of greatest need,” said Ms Cadman.
    “This pay equity claim is more than just about securing a fair wage; it’s about creating a sustainable future for the profession.”
    FIRST Union’s pay equity claim for veterinary nurses will receive legal support and assistance from the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi (PSA).

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Cassidy, Warnock Introduce Legislation to Return Money Owed to Injured Coast Guard Veterans

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) and Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-GA) introduced the Coast Guard Combat-Injured Tax Fairness Act to return improperly withheld taxes back to combat-injured U.S. Coast Guard veterans. It also ensures they receive the same treatment as wounded combat veterans in other branches.
    “Wounded veteran is a wounded veteran, regardless the branch. They served and were hurt in the line of duty,” said Dr. Cassidy. “This shouldn’t be a discussion. This should have been passed yesterday.”
    “Our servicemembers are the best among us, and the Coast Guard is no exception. It’s our duty to ensure all veterans receive the benefits they deserve,” said Senator Reverend Warnock. “I am proud to partner with Senator Cassidy to re-introduce the bipartisan Coast Guard Combat-Injured Tax Fairness Act, which will ensure Coast Guard veterans receive the full benefits they earned through their service. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle should be eager to get this done.”
    In 2016, the Combat-Injured Veterans Tax Fairness Act returned improperly withheld taxes owed to combat-injured veterans of the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, U.S. Air Force, and U.S. Marine Corps. However, due to a technical error, combat-injured U.S. Coast Guard veterans were excluded.
    Background.
    As a member of the U.S. Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Cassidy is a champion of veteran issues. Last month, Cassidy introduced the VetPAC Act and the Veterans Mental Health and Addiction Therapy Quality of Care Act to improve health care for veterans. In January, Cassidy reintroduced the Restore VA Accountability Act to strengthen accountability by unlocking expedited disciplinary processes for VA employees who fail to adequately serve veterans.
    In December 2024, the Senate passed Cassidy’s Veteran Service Organization (VSO) Equal Tax Treatment (VETT) Act, sending the bill to the president’s desk. The bill would expand the deductibility of charitable contributions to all federally chartered tax-exempt organizations serving current and former members of the Armed Forces. The Senate also unanimously passed Cassidy’s bipartisan Gold Star and Surviving Spouse Career Services Act. The legislation increases access to job counseling services for spouses of members of the Armed Forces who died while on active duty through the Disabled Veterans Outreach Program at the U.S. Department of Labor.
    In August 2024, Cassidy penned an op-ed in the American Press highlighting federal resources that support American veterans’ physical and mental health. The op-ed came on the heels of the 43rd National Veteran Wheelchair Games, which was hosted in New Orleans.
    In 2022, the Senate unanimously passed Cassidy’s Solid Start Act to strengthen the VA’s Solid Start program to contact every veteran three times by phone in the first year after they leave active duty. The program helps connect veterans with VA programs and benefits, including mental health resources.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The Council host International Women’s day event

    Source: City of Preston

    On Monday 3 March, the Town Hall opened its doors to host a networking event for International Women’s Day.

    The day saw a panel of local women speak about their experiences in the workplace and how they have implemented change.

    This year’s theme was ‘Accelerate Action’ and community members from across Preston were invited to attend to listen to the key speakers and have the opportunity for networking.

    This showcased the number of strong female role models present within the community and the collective drive towards equality in Preston.

    The speakers were:

    • Mrs Amanda Parker – His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Lancashire
    • Superintendent Sally Riley – Lancashire Constabulary, Chair of Inspire – The Women in Policing Network
    • Miss Zaynab Jogi – Self-Defence Trainer and Mountaineer
    • Dr Kailash Parekh – MBE, Community Champion and Educationalist
    • Dr Chinyere Ajayi – Course Lead at the School of Health, Social Work and Sport, UCLan
    • Mrs Sarah Threlfall – Deputy Chief Executive and Director of Community and Wellbeing at Preston City Council

    There were also stalls shining a light on the work carried out in the community by:

    • Lancashire Women
    • Sahara
    • Ashton Food Aid and Penwortham Care and Share representing Preston Food Network

    According to data from the World Economic Forum, at the current rate of progress it will take 133-years to reach full gender parity, which is roughly five generations from now.

    One of the best ways to forge equality is to understand what works and do more of this faster. 

    More than 50 women attended this networking event, and they were catered for by participants of the Lady Boss course – a programme engaging with a group of 10 non-registered, home-based female cooks from minority communities who were interested in gaining a food safety qualification, registering with the local authority for food safety purposes, and incorporating as a business.

    By the end of the programme, all members had achieved a Level 2 Food Safety certification.

    The food was delicious and off the back of this success, they received another booking for an upcoming event in Preston.

    Reflecting on the event, Councillor Nweeda Khan, Preston City Council’s Cabinet Member for Communities and Social Justice said:

    It was an honour to be part of the International Women’s Day networking event today, and it was inspiring to hear from women from different career paths contributing towards a change in the workplace.

    Preston City Council actively applies and prioritises the principles of Community Wealth Building wherever applicable and appropriate. Community Wealth Building is an approach which aims to ensure the economic system builds wealth and prosperity for everyone.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Why increasing rates of tuberculosis in the UK and US should concern everyone

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Tom Wingfield, Deputy Director of the Centre for Tuberculosis Research, Reader in Tuberculosis and Social Medicine, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, UK; and Honorary Research Associate at Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and, University of Liverpool

    pardi hutabarat/Shutterstock

    With one of the largest tuberculosis (TB) outbreaks in US history, Kansas has more to worry about than its recent Super Bowl defeat. During the past year, 67 people with TB have been detected. This comes on the back of increasing rates of TB in the US year on year since the start of the COVID pandemic.

    Rather than a relic of the Victorian era, TB is the world’s most enduring pandemic, killing more people each year than any other single infection. While more common in low-income countries, TB continues to be found in more deprived communities, cities, prisons, homeless populations, and in black, Asian and Indigenous people, including in wealthy countries such as the US and UK.

    TB outbreaks in wealthy countries act as a canary in a coalmine, reflecting cracks in national public health systems. More broadly, TB outbreaks in any setting have deeper implications for the struggle to end TB globally.

    TB is an airborne infection that doesn’t respect borders. With increasing mass movement, including due to climate change and war, the maxim “TB anywhere is TB everywhere” is more resonant today than ever.

    In the UK, TB rates consistently declined between 2011 and 2020. But, like the US, this decline reversed since COVID emerged in early 2020.

    In 2023, there was a 13% increase in the number of people who became unwell with TB in England, compared with 2022.

    At 9.5 people with TB per 100,000 people per year, England is in jeopardy of losing its “low TB incidence” status (less than ten people with TB per 100,000 people per year).

    Rates of TB in England have a stark social gradient, with the poorest 10% of people having five times higher rates of TB than the richest 10%.

    In the UK, there is a cost of living crisis. Many people, especially the poorest, are struggling to put food on the table. TB is a social disease of poverty that thrives where there is overcrowding, undernutrition and poor working and living conditions.

    But the increase in TB in the UK cannot be put down to greater risk of disease alone. The response of the health and social care system to prevent and cure TB is crucial.

    The BCG vaccine, currently the only TB vaccine, is not nearly as effective as we would like at preventing disease. There is hope on the horizon with several vaccines under development, but their effect may be impeded by vaccine hesitancy driven by misinformation.

    BCG is still the only TB vaccine, but it’s not highly effective.
    TuktaBaby/Shutterstock

    Other barriers to address include lack of TB awareness, continuing TB-related stigma, understaffing of vital TB community nursing teams, and a breach between health and social care sectors to support those vulnerable to TB.

    For countries with lower incidence of TB across Europe and North America, many TB policies are targeted at identifying and treating TB in groups who are most at risk of being exposed to the disease, including people moving from regions of the world where TB is more common.

    Patterns of migration to the UK changed significantly following Brexit. A need to expand the workforce, particularly in health and social care, has led to active recruitment and movement of people from higher TB burden countries. This is relevant because, in England, four in five people with TB were born outside the UK, and rates among this group increased by 15% between 2022 and 2023.

    Screening migrant populations as part of their visa application process pre-entry is effective at identifying people with infectious TB. But prevention is better than cure, and there remains a gap in screening for TB infection or TB disease without symptoms.

    Providing well-tolerated, preventive TB treatment can reduce the risk of developing active TB disease by 85% in the future. Yet the screening programme in the UK is under-resourced, with just 11.5% of eligible migrants screened for TB infection in 2023.

    We should not overlook the fact that rates of TB also increased, although to a lesser extent (3.9%), among people born in the UK – the first time this has happened for many years.

    Among both UK-born and non-UK-born populations, often overlapping social risk factors such as homelessness, asylum seeker status, drug or alcohol misuse, incarceration and mental health disorders continue to drive TB. These factors, which jumped by 27% between 2022 and 2023, not only increase the likelihood of TB disease but are associated with much lower rates of cure.

    Early diagnosis and treatment of TB are crucial to prevent long-term health issues or even death. The sooner someone starts effective treatment, the sooner they stop being infectious, helping to reduce the spread of TB. Improving access to diagnosis and care will lower TB transmission.

    Unacceptable delays in treatment

    Nearly a third of people with TB in the UK experience a delay of four months between the onset of their symptoms (commonly cough, fever, night sweats and weight loss) and taking their first anti-TB medicine. This unacceptable delay is similar to (or even longer than) the treatment delays we have documented in low- and middle-income countries with much higher TB burdens, including Peru, Nepal and Mozambique.

    In the UK, most people are entitled to free NHS care, and TB care and prevention is free to all. However, the NHS is overwhelmed and policies relating to healthcare recovery costs of visitors and migrants can prevent people with TB, wherever they are from, from getting timely care. This situation poses a public health threat to us all.

    Effective TB prevention and care is possible. While current tools are imperfect, albeit with recent progress in diagnostics and treatment, researchers around the world are further advancing science and innovation in the fight against TB. This includes the promise of nutritional supplementation, financial and social support, and a new TB vaccine. Providing timely support to everyone with TB remains fundamental to our response to this illness of poverty.

    To end TB, whether in the US, UK, or globally, we would do well to remember and apply the old medical adage: treat the person, not the disease.

    Tom Wingfield is supported by grants from: the Wellcome Trust, UK (209075/Z/17/Z); the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO), the Medical Research Council (MRC) and Wellcome, UK (Joint Global Health Trials, MR/V004832/1); the Medical Research Council (Public Health Intervention Development Award “PHIND”, APP2293); the Medical Research Foundation (Dorothy Temple Cross International Collaboration Research Grant, MRF-131–0006-RG-KHOS-C0942); and UNITAID (2022-50-START-4-ALL). Tom is an honorary research associate at the Department of Global Public Health, Karolinksa Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and is also an ad hoc consultant for the World Health Organization and the Stop TB Partnership.

    Jessica Potter has previously received research funding from Medical Research Council UK. She chairs a grassroots network called UK Academics and Professionals to end TB and is an advisory member of the Innovations Constituency of the Stop TB Partnership.

    Kerry Millington receives funding from UK aid from the UK government for the research programme that she works on. Views expressed are those of her own and do not necessarily reflect the UK government’s official policies.

    – ref. Why increasing rates of tuberculosis in the UK and US should concern everyone – https://theconversation.com/why-increasing-rates-of-tuberculosis-in-the-uk-and-us-should-concern-everyone-249202

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Chaotic cosmic clones and the Joker reinvented – what to watch and read this week

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Anna Walker, Senior Arts + Culture Editor

    When director Robert Eggers asked him what kind of movies he was interested in, Robert Pattinson said: “I only wanna do strange things.” It seems he’s taken the same approach to stardom as fellow teen star, Daniel Radcliffe – make your name in a big-budget franchise, then spend the rest of your career starring in the interesting, the unexpected and downright weird.

    Since his turn as the sparkle-skinned teen vampire heartthrob Edward Cullen in the Twilight movies, Pattinson has played a tortured lighthouse keeper, a celibate space prisoner and a city slicker who barely leaves his limousine. Even his iteration of Batman was kooky – a tragic, lonely hero in smudged black eye make-up.

    The trailer for Mickey 17.

    So, it’s no wonder that he jumped at the chance to star in Mickey 17. The latest film by renowned Korean writer-director Bong Joon-ho, it follows a mission to establish a human settlement on an inhospitable alien planet in the year 2054. In this imagined future, it has become possible to replicate human beings with total accuracy using an advanced form of 3D printing.

    Although outlawed on ethical grounds back on Earth, human printing is legal in the remote regions of space. There, disposable workers known as “expendables” can be reprinted on demand each time they perish. Our reviewer, an expert in science fiction, said: “Like Bong’s earlier films, Mickey 17 combines artful world-building, an impeccable cast, social satire, anarchic humour – and a taste for the grotesque.”

    Mickey 17 is in cinemas now




    Read more:
    Mickey 17: this absurdist, dystopian clone drama is highly entertaining – despite its flaws


    Villains and heroes

    Pattinson’s Batman has yet to face the Joker, the character’s arch nemesis, and a recurring role that is even more prized among actors than Bruce Wayne. But Vera Drew, who co-writes, directs and stars as several iterations of the character in her new film The People’s Joker, hasn’t let a casting director get in the way of her ambitions.

    The trailer for The People’s Joker.

    In this surreal, hilarious – and very much unofficial – film, Drew plays a mix of both Harley Quinn and the Joker. It’s a queer twist on the DC universe, and a metaphor for the difficulties she encountered as a transgender teen.

    For our reviewers, experts in comic books and their adaptations, it was a breath of fresh air. Proof that, in the era of Marvel’s box office dominance, there is still room for unique remixes of familiar superhero stories.

    The People’s Joker is touring cinemas across the UK




    Read more:
    The People’s Joker remixes familiar characters to create a new kind of comic book movie



    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    The most streamed TV series on Netflix this week is the new drama Toxic Town – and deservedly so. It tells the true story of a group of women from Corby in Northamptonshire, UK, who gave birth to children with limb differences in the 1980s and 90s. The children were born with shortened arms or legs or missing fingers.

    The drama follows their battle to uncover the cause and their subsequent fight for justice. It makes for compelling viewing, with standout performances from former Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker and White Lotus’s Aimee Lou Wood.

    The trailer for Toxic Town.

    We asked a pair of climate researchers to review the show. They found it to be a “stark warning about the dangers of weak environmental protections”. Far from being a thing of the past, they argue that we could return to the toxic times seen in Corby if we fail to prioritise stringent environmental safeguards.

    Toxic Town is now streaming on Netflix




    Read more:
    Netflix’s Toxic Town offers a stark warning on environmental rollbacks


    Timely storytelling

    For more culture with a message this week, we highly recommend No Other Land. Winner of the Oscar for best documentary feature film, it chronicles the efforts of Palestinian townspeople to combat an Israeli plan to demolish their villages in the West Bank and use the area as a military training ground.

    The trailer for No Other Land.

    The film was directed by four Palestinian and Israeli activists and journalists including Basel Adra, who is a resident of the area facing demolition. The film’s subject matter has made it difficult to attract distributors in many countries, including the US. British viewers, though, can stream the film for free on Channel 4.

    No Other Land is now in select cinemas and streaming on Channel 4




    Read more:
    A Palestinian-Israeli film just won an Oscar − so why is it so hard to see?


    Show Don’t Tell is the new short story collection from Curtis Sittenfeld. She’s the American writer behind Rodham, the 2020 novel that reimagined the life of Hilary Clinton. Offering slices of life in the American Midwest, it’s a profound exploration of individual and social conflict at a time when the US is on the verge of momentous political change.

    Many of Sittenfeld’s characters are experiencing a low-level sense of dread. Some are obsessed with death. But the stories remind us that, considering the chaotic past decade, where catastrophe and complex political issues have dominated American lives, fear and anxiety are an entirely reasonable emotional response.

    Our reviewer, an expert in American literature and history, read all 12 stories in one sitting. She found them to be moving, witty and achingly real.




    Read more:
    Show Don’t Tell by Curtis Sittenfeld is moving, witty and achingly real


    – ref. Chaotic cosmic clones and the Joker reinvented – what to watch and read this week – https://theconversation.com/chaotic-cosmic-clones-and-the-joker-reinvented-what-to-watch-and-read-this-week-251646

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Investing in a more active tomorrow

    Sport and recreation facilities are the heart of communities across our province, serving as places to gather, forge friendships and be active together. Alberta’s government recognizes the invaluable role recreation centres play in community well-being, and that Albertans need effective, up-to-date sport and recreation infrastructure to remain healthy, vibrant and actively engaged in the sports they love.

    That’s why, in 2024, Alberta’s government launched the Active Communities Initiative, to build and revitalize sport and recreation infrastructure in communities in every corner of the province. In its first year, the Active Communities Initiative invested $10 million in 19 projects across the province.

    “I’m proud to be part of a government that understands the importance of sport and recreation, and that is taking steps to support access to sport and recreation across Alberta. I look forward to watching these projects come to fruition, building healthier families and more resilient communities in every corner of our province.”

    Joseph Schow, Minister of Tourism and Sport

    “Making sport and recreation more affordable and accessible opens the doors for more Albertans to live healthier, more active lives. I’m pleased the Active Communities Initiative supports that, while putting money back in the pockets of families where it’s needed most.”

    Nathan Neudorf, Minister of Affordability and Utilities

    Grants provided in the first year of the Active Communities Initiative will support the creation of a recreation centre in La Crete and the expansion of the Indus Recreation Centre, as well as the creation and revitalization of indoor and outdoor pickleball and tennis courts, community pools, ski clubs, curling rinks and more in communities across the province.

    “Active Communities Initiative funding is essential for our project in La Crete to get off the ground. This long-awaited recreation centre will support the physical and mental health of our growing population year-round for all ages, provide new skills and jobs and help retain the professionals our community needs to continue thriving.”

    Annelise Dyck, president, Mackenzie Aquatics Society 

    “The Active Communities Initiative provides a bridge that connects our proud past with our exciting future! Our facility has been operating with the same capacity for 30 years and with our surrounding communities seeing tremendous growth. We believe the expanded year-round ice arena will offer more opportunities through accessible, inclusive infrastructure that fosters community engagement, volunteerism, active lifestyles and social connectivity.”

    Dave Place, president, Bow Valley Agricultural Society

    The Active Communities Initiative is a fund-matching program and has two streams for prospective projects:

    • Stream 1 funds projects from a minimum of $100,000 to a maximum of $500,000.
    • Stream 2 funds projects from a minimum of $500,001 to a maximum of $1,500,000.

    Larger-scale sport and recreation infrastructure projects will continue to be funded through the Capital Plan.

    The Active Communities Initiative is Alberta’s first grant program solely dedicated to funding sport and recreation infrastructure. The initiative is open to eligible community groups, non-profit organizations, and societies, including First Nations and Metis Settlements that wish to build or enhance active spaces that support sport and recreational opportunities for their communities. The next round of Active Communities Initiative funding will open in Spring 2025.

    Quick facts

    • Larger-scale projects supported through the first intake ($500,001 to $1,500,000):
      • Westside Regional Recreation Society – Calgary
      • IQ Tennis and Pickleball Centre – Edmonton
      • Elk Point and District Agricultural Society – Elk Point
      • Bow Valley Agricultural Society – Indus
      • Mackenzie Aquatics Society – Peace River
      • Rocky Mountain Bike Park Society – Rocky Mountain House
      • Edmonton Northwest Zone Basketball Association – St. Albert
      • Vauxhall Academy of Baseball Society – Vauxhall
    • Small- and mid-sized projects supported through the first intake (up to $500,000):
      • Athabasca Regional Multiplex Society – Athabasca
      • Greater Forest Lawn 55+ Society – Calgary
      • Winsport – Calgary
      • Rocky Rod and Gun Club – Clearwater County
      • Grande Prairie Pickleball Club – Grande Prairie
      • Hardisty Lakeview Golf Association – Hardisty
      • Medicine Lodge Ski Club – Lacombe County
      • Legal Curling Club – Legal
      • West Sturgeon Agricultural Society – Sturgeon County
      • Sundre Aquatic Centre – Sundre
      • Rotary Club of Whitecourt – Whitecourt

    Related information

    • Active Communities Initiative

    Related news

    • Building opportunities for a healthier tomorrow (Dec 12, 2024)
    • Building active spaces and brighter futures (May 3, 2024)

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Deaths of unhoused British Columbians rose sharply in 2023

    At least 458 people experiencing homelessness died in British Columbia in 2023, according to data from the BC Coroners Service.

    This reflects an increase of 23% from 2022 (373) and is nearly three times the number of people who died while experiencing homelessness in the province in 2020 (155).

    “The data speaks to the tragic reality of the struggles many face in our communities throughout B.C.,” said Dr. Jatinder Baidwan, chief coroner. “During the period studied, between 2016 and 2023, the deaths of 1,940 people were reported to the BC Coroners Service, identified as experiencing homelessness.”

    For the purpose of the report, an individual experiencing homelessness was defined as:

    • unsheltered: a person living outdoors, in a make-shift shelter, a parked vehicle, a vacant home or any other structure not intended for habitation;
    • sheltered: a person staying at an emergency shelter (overnight) or who is temporarily sheltered (suspected to be for less than 30 days) by friends or family, in a short-term shelter, safe house for youth, or transition house for women and children fleeing violence; and
    • persons residing in short-term shelters, safe houses, or transition houses for an unknown length of time.

    More than half of deaths reported in 2023 were people between the ages of 30 through 49, and 79% of decedents were males. The data also shows that nearly half of those deaths were males who were unsheltered (47%).

    In 2023, 91% of deaths of people experiencing homelessness were classified as accidental (419), and 86% were due to accidental unregulated drug toxicity (394).

    Additional notable findings from the report include:

    • about 46% of individuals met the criteria for unsheltered homelessness, versus 35% for sheltered homelessness;
    • in 2023, 41% of female decedents were sheltered, compared to 34% of males;
    • the highest proportion of deaths of people experiencing homelessness occurred in winter (28%), followed by spring (27%) in 2023;
    • 26% of deaths of people experiencing homelessness in 2023 occurred in the Fraser Health Authority (117), followed closely by 25% within Island Health (114); and
    • in 2023, the health service delivery area of Vancouver had the highest number of deaths (77), followed by central Vancouver Island (55), which includes the Cowichan Valley, Nanaimo and Tofino, and then Fraser East (50), which includes Abbotsford and Hope.

    Note that mortality rates within the report should be interpreted with caution. The BC Coroners Service does not investigate all deaths of individuals experiencing homelessness and the number of deaths within the report excludes individuals experiencing homelessness that did not meet the legal criteria of the Coroners Act for reporting. Additionally, the data is preliminary and subject to change as coroners’ investigations conclude.

    Learn More:

    To read the report, Deaths of Individuals Experiencing Homelessness in British Columbia, 2016-2023, visit: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/birth-adoption-death-marriage-and-divorce/deaths/coroners-service/statistical/250212_homeless_web_report_2016-2023.pdf

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Swimming Pool funding secured for Preston Leisure Centres

    Source: City of Preston

    Additional funding from Sport England has been accepted by Preston City Council Cabinet Members (Wednesday 5 March) to support a capital investment to improve energy efficiency at Fulwood Leisure Centre.

    The grant sum of £226,552 will be transferred to Greenwich Leisure Limited (GLL), the charitable social enterprise that operates Better leisure centres in Preston including Fulwood and Westview, on behalf of Preston City Council.

    Rising energy prices over recent years have significantly increased the costs of keeping the two swimming pools open. Since transferring over the running of the city’s leisure city centre assets to GLL in 2017, GLL has been able to deliver substantial savings to protect the long-term viability of these important community assets.

    Following a successful bid from the Phase 1 Swimming Pool Support Fund (SPSF) in September 2023, the Council has now received funding from the Phase 2 SPSF.

    Due to the national demand on this funding, the government and Sport England is only awarding the funding to one facility per local authority and to fund two interventions at that site.

    A single application was submitted on behalf of all the eligible pools in the area.

    The funding will be used to install solar panels to the roof of Fulwood Leisure Centre which will significantly reduce energy bills by lowering the centre’s reliance on the national grid, while contributing to carbon savings.

    The old boiler will be replaced with a new state-of-the-art heating system which will further improve the energy efficiency of the building. 

    Councillor Zafar Coupland, Cabinet Member for Health and Wellbeing said:

    Swimming pools are such an important part of our communities and are accessed by many as an enjoyable, low impact activity for maintaining a healthy and active lifestyle. The additional grant funding is a critical and very welcome boost in helping our leisure centres to stay operational and to carry out ongoing essential repairs.

    One of the aims of the Phase 2 funding agreement is to encourage the leisure sector to transition to a position of environmental and financial sustainability through local strategic plans for leisure and active wellbeing.

    Established in 1993, GLL is the largest UK-based charitable social enterprise delivering leisure, health and community services. Operating under the Better brand, it manages 250 public sport and leisure centres, 113 libraries and 10 children’s centres in partnership with 50 local councils, public agencies and sporting organisations.

    Michael Manley, Preston Partnership Manager at GLL said:

    The move reinforces our commitment to supporting renewable energy, while allowing us to make vital savings on energy costs. These savings will be reinvested so that we can continue our ongoing programme of improvements to enhance the customer experience, offer the best possible leisure facilities and better serve the community of Preston.

    Preston City Council actively applies and prioritises the principles of Community Wealth Building wherever applicable and appropriate. Community Wealth Building is an approach which aims to ensure the economic system builds wealth and prosperity for everyone.

    Sport England 

    Sport England is a public body and invests up to £300 million National Lottery and government money each year in projects and programmes that help people get active and play sport.

    It wants everyone in England, regardless of age, background, or level of ability, to feel able to engage in sport and physical activity. That’s why a lot of its work is specifically focused on helping people who do no, or very little, physical activity and groups who are typically less active – like women, disabled people and people on lower incomes.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pilot encourages parents to have fun whilst reading to their children

    Source: City of Liverpool

    As part of our World Book Day celebrations, Liverpool City Council has launched an exciting new project to help parents make Storytime even more engaging and enjoyable.

    “Tell Me a Story, Liverpool” is a unique pilot programme delivered in partnership with Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust and the Dollywood Foundation, an organisation founded by Dolly Parton to inspire children to achieve educational success.

    This initiative is designed to support parents with practical tips and guidance to become expert storytellers. As part of the programme, participating families will receive free books, generously provided by the Dolly Parton Imagination Library.

    Health professionals, including health visitors and family nurses, highlight the many benefits of reading with young children. Storytime helps build self-esteem, supports speech and vocabulary development, sparks imagination, and can even improve sleep patterns.

    Through this initiative, up to 100 families across the city will gain valuable insights into the importance of books and storytelling in their child’s development. Each participating family will receive a book every month for at least the next three years, fostering a lifelong love of reading.

    All families with children aged 0-5 can also benefit from the ‘BookStart’ programme, which encourages shared reading from an early age. Find out more here: https://www.booktrust.org.uk/what-we-do/programmes-and-campaigns/bookstart/?gad_source=1

    Councillor Harry Doyle, Cabinet Member for Health, Wellbeing and Culture, said “Reading to your child helps to build a life-long love of reading. I am so pleased that families will have the opportunity to discuss how they can use books and stories to support the development of their child. 

    “A child’s first years are when their brains are developing the most, and this amazing opportunity to promote and provide shared reading opportunities will have a positive impact as we help more children to develop and be ready to start school.”

    Prof Matt Ashton, Director of Public Health, said “ I loved reading to my kids when they were little, and the fact they have taken their love of reading into their teenage years. Any opportunity you have to engage with a child using a picture or story book can open the door to a wonderful world of words, art, and imagination. 

    “Teaching them rhymes, songs and repetition can help them to make sense of the world around them and lay foundation skills that will last a lifetime. It’s not just about reading, but sharing special time together, building bonds, confidence and giving them the best start in life.”

    Cath Creed, Family Nurse Partnership supervisor said “My team have received further training from Book Start to further their understanding of the vast array of benefits looking through a book together can bring for children.

    “It is great that we can enrich our young parents and infants lives through this collaboration with partners from Barnardo’s, Book Start, Dollywood Foundation, Public health commissioners and Health Visiting colleagues.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Nova Scotia to Recoup Hundreds of Millions from Tobacco Settlement

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Nova Scotia will receive about $809 million from tobacco companies for the impact of smoking on the healthcare system.

    All provinces and territories joined together to sue for the healthcare costs related to tobacco use. A mediated settlement was approved by the Superior Court of Ontario Thursday, March 6.

    In the first year, Nova Scotia is expected to receive about $200 million and expects to receive the rest over the next 15 to 20 years.

    “The Government of Nova Scotia pursued this litigation to hold the tobacco industry accountable for the harms it has caused Nova Scotians and for the related healthcare costs,” said Premier Tim Houston. “Those wrongful practices resulted in extraordinary costs to our healthcare system, and we set out to recover those costs.”

    The resolution pertains to alleged past practices by the tobacco companies from the 1950s to 1980s.

    The total value of the court-ordered resolution is $32.5 billion, with the provinces getting $24.7 billion.

    Smoking is linked to more than two dozen diseases and conditions. Most lung cancer is caused by smoking, but smoking can also cause cancer in other parts of the body. Tobacco contains thousands of chemicals with hundreds being toxic and at least 70 known to cause cancer.

    About 13.7 per cent of Nova Scotians smoke. There is support available for people who want to quit smoking and using tobacco:


    Quotes:

    “This is a historic day for healthcare. Nova Scotia’s healthcare system has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to treat smoking-related illnesses, and these illnesses were devastating to Nova Scotians and put a major strain on our healthcare system.”
    — Michelle Thompson, Minister of Health and Wellness


    Quick Facts:

    • the companies involved are JTI-Macdonald Corp., Rothmans, Benson & Hedges and Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd.
    • the mediation process took five years
    • B.C. filed the first lawsuit to recover healthcare costs from tobacco companies in 1998

    Other than cropping, Province of Nova Scotia photos are not to be altered in any way

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI NGOs: The women leaders in Cameroon fighting for maternal health story Mar 07, 2025

    Source: Doctors Without Borders –

    Since 2023, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been working with influential local women in Cameroon’s Far North region, where insecurity and local practices can severely affect access to critical health care. As key intermediaries, women known as matrons and mother leaders are fighting against malnutrition and infant mortality, saving lives amid an alarming humanitarian crisis.

    “Many women give birth at home because of fear—fear of insecurity,” said Yeza Aoudi, a matron in the region. “Displaced people are terrified when they encounter armed men. If a woman goes into labor at night, she would rather deliver at home than risk going to the hospital.”

    As one of nine matrons trained and supported by MSF, Yeza helps raise awareness about maternal health, vaccination follow-up, and guiding women toward the medical care they need.

    In 2023, just 49 percent of deliveries occurred in hospitals across Cameroon, while the Far North region saw 18,720 home births. Maternal and neonatal deaths remain shockingly high in both settings, with 595 deaths in communities, nearly equal to the 631 deaths that occurred in hospitals.

    Postnatal consultation in the sexual and reproductive health department of Kourgui Integrated Health Center. | Cameroon 2025 © Vanessa Fodjo/MSF

    A community approach to improving access to health care

    In the Mora health district, where MSF is present, maternal and child mortality persists due to limited access to health care, economic instability, and the consequences of a long-lasting regional conflict.

    In response, MSF has launched an innovative community outreach strategy in which matrons and mother leaders living in the community are key intermediaries in breaking down barriers between community members and medical services, ensuring people can access health care.

    “In the past, matrons were elderly women who delivered babies at home,” said Danielle Zouyane, a midwife supervisor. “Today, their role has evolved. They no longer run home births but identify pregnant women who need care and refer them to the health centers.”

    Cameroon 2025 © Vanessa Fodjo/MSF

    “We matrons know how to detect the first signs of pregnancy. We go to [the pregnant women] to ask what’s wrong and encourage them to go to hospital. We tell them about the benefits of prenatal care for the baby.”

    Yeza, matron

    Mother leaders, meanwhile, play a key role in raising awareness about eating habits and encouraging pregnant and breastfeeding women to visit health centers. They also organize cooking demonstrations using local, affordable foods to fight malnutrition, a dangerous health issue in the region.

    “Every week, we visit different neighborhoods to raise awareness,” said Neche Maïzena, a mother leader. “The main challenge for families with ill children is the distance between them and health centers. But thanks to our efforts, more women are seeking consultations.”

    In 2024, mother leaders and matrons reached close to 36,500 people and referred more than 1,100 patients for various conditions, including prenatal and postnatal care, assisted deliveries, vaccinations, malnutrition, and sexual violence. Of those, 1,025 (91 percent) arrived at the Kourgui Integrated Health Center, a 40 percent increase from 2023.

    A cooking demonstration organized by mother leaders at Kourgui Integrated Health Center on how to make enriched porridge to tackle malnutrition. | Cameroon 2025 © Vanessa Fodjo/MSF

    The measurable impact on communities

    The capacity-building efforts for matrons and mother leaders have led to tangible improvements. Since the matron referral strategy was introduced in 2023, the rate of women attending prenatal consultations in the first trimester increased to almost 10 percent, up from just over 6.5 percent the previous year. Although the figures are still low, this marks a significant leap in improving access to care.

    “Women often hide their pregnancies in the first few months, but with the help of the matrons, we can detect early signs and encourage them to go to the hospital,” said Yeza Aoudi, a matron. “We explain the benefits of prenatal care for their baby.”

    In 2024, MSF provided about 14,500 sexual and reproductive health consultations at the Kourgui Integrated Health Center, and 1,380 deliveries.

    Attendees at a cooking demonstration for mothers. | Cameroon 2025 © Vanessa Fodjo/MSF

    A humanitarian crisis with growing needs

    The ongoing crisis in the Lake Chad basin has worsened humanitarian conditions in the Far North, making access to health care even more critical for both people who are displaced and host communities. Since 2015, MSF has been delivering essential medical and humanitarian aid, including emergency surgery, treatment for malaria and diarrhea, and nutrition and reproductive health services.

    Despite significant progress, the challenges remain immense. However, the dedication of local women proves that lasting solutions are possible—even in the most challenging environments.

    We speak out. Get updates.

    MIL OSI NGO –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Saskatchewan’s Commitment to Seniors Continues

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Released on March 7, 2025

    The Government of Saskatchewan Continues to Focus on Improving the Health and Wellbeing of Seniors

    Seniors, and Rural and Remote Health Minister Lori Carr met with counterparts at the Federal/Provincial/Territorial (FPT) Minsters Responsible for Seniors Forum in Moncton, New Brunswick on March 4 and 5 to discuss issues related to seniors and ways they can be best supported.

    “Our government is committed to supporting the health and wellbeing of older adults in Saskatchewan,” Carr said. “Working with my provincial and territorial counterparts was productive, as we learned about initiatives underway in other parts of Canada, and ways we can learn from each other to support seniors.” 

    Saskatchewan’s 2024-25 Provincial Budget provides more than $43 million in targeted initiatives to support seniors to live within their communities and provide the supports they need. 

    This investment fulfills government’s commitment to provide home nursing services free of charge; subsidize supportive services through home care; subsidize the overall cost of publicly funded long-term care; provide reduced ambulance costs; and cap the cost of prescription drugs to $25, for those listed on the Saskatchewan Formulary and those approved under Exception Drug Status. 

    Through Saskatchewan’s Connected Care Strategy, four community health centres in Regina and Saskatoon continue to meet the needs of senior citizens. 

    A further funding commitment extends to coverage of Continuous and Flash Glucose Monitoring Systems to seniors aged 65 and older with a diabetes diagnosis and currently using any version of insulin. 

    Government continues to assist seniors by having increased the maximum monthly benefit for the Seniors Income Plan and the Personal Care Home Benefit. 

    The FPT Seniors Forum is an intergovernmental body established to share information, discuss new and emerging issues related to seniors and work collaboratively on key projects. All provinces and territories and the federal government participate in the forum. 

    For further information, visit: FPT Seniors Forum.

    -30-

    For more information, contact:

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Councillors campaign to tackle economic inequality

    Source: City of Plymouth

    This International Women’s Day, Councillors have formed a new collaboration to tackle the economic inequality between men and women in the city. 

    Cabinet Members Chris Penberthy, Jemima Laing and Sally Haydon have implemented action on Community Safety, Poverty, Skills and Education, Housing, Health, and Children’s Services throughout their careers. 

    They are starting this focus on work and wages, with an invitation to women’s organisations in Plymouth to meet to discuss the causes and consequences of economic inequality. 

    Trevi, Gifted Women, and Westcountry Women’s Awards will be founder contributors to the discussion.  Professor Jasmine Kelland at the University of Plymouth Business School will support discussions with her expertise and network that focusses on men’s experiences of balancing work with caring responsibilities.

    Phase two will invite businesses from the city to discuss their experiences of tackling work accessibility, low wages, flexible working, discrimination, and other measures to address this persistent imbalance.

    Councillor Jemima Laing, Deputy Leader of the Council said: “This project is something we are all equally passionate about, we want to come together and help tackle economic inequality.

    “A real living wage is necessary for individuals to pay for basic living expenses.  At £12.60 per hour or £466 for a 37 hour week, around half of women in Plymouth earn less compared to one in five men. 

    “The consequences of this don’t just leave women relying on other people for basic living expenses, it also affects families and children, and wider communities.

    “We look forward to starting this project and engaging with businesses in the city on this important issue.”

    Proactive approaches by businesses in the city include enhanced support for flexible working, enhanced paternity pay and parental leave, travel to work plans for parents and carers and women-specific support such as networking, mentoring, and ensuring that there is a woman on recruitment panels for shortlisting and interviews. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Inquest into the Death of Rayleen Angus Besic

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Released on March 7, 2025

    A public inquest into the death of Rayleen Angus Besic will be held April 7 to 11, 2025, at the Coronet Hotel, 3551 2nd Avenue West, in Prince Albert.

    The first day of the inquest is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Subsequent start times will be determined by the presiding coroner.

    Angus Besic, 25, was found unconscious in her cell at the Pine Grove Provincial Correctional Centre in Prince Albert on April 15, 2022. EMS was called and staff began life-saving efforts. EMS arrived, took over her care and transported her to the Victoria Hospital. She was pronounced deceased at 10:46 hours on April 16, 2022.

    Section 20 of The Coroners Act, 1999 states that the Chief Coroner shall hold an inquest into the death of a person who dies while an inmate at a jail or a correctional facility, unless the coroner is satisfied that the person’s death was due entirely to natural causes and was not preventable.

    The Saskatchewan Coroners Service is responsible for the investigation of all sudden, unexpected deaths. The purpose of an inquest is to establish who died, when and where that person died and the medical cause and manner of death. The coroner’s jury may make recommendations to prevent similar deaths.

    Coroner Brent Gough, K.C. will preside at the inquest.

    -30-

    For more information, contact:

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: ‘Pac-Man with a ponytail’ proteins regulate everything from night vision to heartbeats – studying what GRKs look like could improve an array of drugs

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Priyanka Naik, Ph.D. Candidate in Structural Biology, Purdue University

    Rhodopsin kinase – GRK1 – is a GRK found in the retina of your eyes. Priyanka Naik, CC BY-ND

    Each cell in your body relies on precise communication with other cells to function properly. At the center of this process are the molecular switches that turn communication signals in the body on and off. These molecules are key players in health and disease. One such molecular switch is G protein-coupled receptor kinases, or GRKs for short.

    From vision to heart function and cell growth, GRKs play a vital role in maintaining physiological balance. When they go awry, they can contribute to cardiovascular disease, inflammatory illnesses like rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, and multiple types of cancer.

    Their involvement in a broad range of diseases makes GRKs an attractive drug target. Around 30% to 40% of all drugs currently on the market focus on these proteins. However, designing drugs that selectively target specific GRKs is a difficult task. Because they are structurally similar to each other and to other proteins, molecules binding to one GRK might also bind to many other enzymes and cause unwanted side effects.

    A better understanding of how GRKs interact with their targets can help researchers develop better drugs. So my work in the Tesmer Lab at Purdue University focuses on uncovering more information on the structure of GRKs.

    What do G protein-coupled receptor kinases look like?

    What researchers know about the structure of GRKs has advanced significantly over the past two decades, revealing the intricate mechanisms by which they function.

    The ability to physically look at proteins is highly useful for drug development. Seeing a protein’s structure is like looking at a jigsaw puzzle – you can find the missing piece by knowing its shape. Similarly, knowing a protein’s shape helps scientists design molecules that fit perfectly into it, making drugs more effective.

    GRKs consist of several modules, or domains, that serve a particular purpose. Together, these modules assemble into a structure resembling a Pac-Man with a ponytail.

    The kinase domain – the Pac-Man – is the catalytic center where the protein does its main job: adding a phosphate group to its target to control its activity. It has two subdomains – one small and one large lobe – connected by a hinge that can open and close. Like Pac-Man, this domain closes around reactants and reopens to release products.

    The three domains of GRKs resemble a Pac-Man with a ponytail. Shown here is GRK2.
    Priyanka Naik, CC BY-ND

    The RH domain – the ponytail – stabilizes the kinase domain. It guides and docks the GRK to its target protein.

    Humans have seven GRKs, each specialized for different tissues and functions, and each unique in structure. Some regulate vision, while others affect your brain, kidney and immune functions, among others. Their structural differences dictate how they interact with their targets, and understanding these distinctions is key to designing drugs that can selectively target each one.

    In 2003, researchers in the lab where I work uncovered the first known structure of a GRK – specifically, GRK2, which is involved in heart functions and cell proliferation – by using a technique called macromolecular crystallography. This involved bombarding a GRK2 sample with X-rays and tracing where they bounce off to determine where each atom of the protein is located.

    Current state of GRK research

    By determining how the three modules of GRK2 are arranged and where its target molecules would bind, my colleagues and I can design drugs that strongly interact with GRK2.

    GRK2 with Paxil bound to its active site.
    Priyanka Naik, CC BY-ND

    For example, in 2012, one of my colleagues discovered that the antidepressant Paxil could inhibit GRK2. To build on this discovery, our team designed drugs with similar shapes to Paxil to identify ones that effectively and selectively inhibit GRK2. The goal was to develop treatments that could target GRK2-related diseases such as heart failure and breast cancer without interfering with other proteins, thereby minimizing side effects.

    After determining what Paxil looks like when bound to GRK2, we designed a series of derivative compounds that better fit into GRK2’s active site – the missing jigsaw puzzle pieces. Some of these compounds were able to better block GRK2 compared with Paxil, improving the ability of heart muscle cells to contract. While the research is still in its early stages, our findings suggest that these compounds could potentially be used to treat heart failure.

    An important missing piece of the story is what GRK2 looks like when bound to its primary target in the cells. These protein complexes are highly shape-shifting, making traditional imaging methods very difficult.

    However, recent advances in imaging have made it possible to determine the structure of these molecules. Cryogenic electron microscopy, or cryo-EM, flash-freezes proteins and bombards them with electrons to capture their structure. These studies have thus far revealed what GRK1 and GRK2 look like when bound to two different target proteins, offering critical insights into how they work.

    Cryo-EM was the subject of the 2017 Nobel Prize in chemistry.

    My work focuses on uncovering how GRK2 function is different from GRK1. These proteins play different physiological roles – GRK1 primarily regulates vision, while GRK2 is involved in heart function and cell proliferation. Identifying structural differences in different GRKs will help researchers design drugs that only target the GRK of interest, thus preventing side effects.

    By combining cutting-edge imaging techniques with decades of research, scientists in my lab and others hope to one day unlock the full therapeutic potential of GRKs, offering pinpointed treatments for a wide range of diseases.

    Priyanka Naik receives funding from Purdue University. The Tesmer Lab, discussed here, is funded by Purdue Institute for Cancer Research, National Institutes of Health and the Walther Cancer Foundation.

    – ref. ‘Pac-Man with a ponytail’ proteins regulate everything from night vision to heartbeats – studying what GRKs look like could improve an array of drugs – https://theconversation.com/pac-man-with-a-ponytail-proteins-regulate-everything-from-night-vision-to-heartbeats-studying-what-grks-look-like-could-improve-an-array-of-drugs-248298

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Welfare cuts won’t succeed without healthier jobs

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Alice Martin, Head of Research, Work Foundation, Lancaster University

    PeopleImages.com – Yuri A/Shutterstock

    The UK could be poised to cut billions of pounds from its welfare spend as the Treasury takes the view that there is less room for manoeuvre in the finances than hoped. Only last October, Chancellor Rachel Reeves believed she had almost £10 billion of so-called “fiscal headroom”, essentially a buffer in her budget if the economy changed. But things have changed very quickly for Reeves.

    Welfare spending in the UK is around £50 billion a year – and predicted to rise to more than £75 billion by 2030. Regardless of other pressures, the government had already been expressing concern about the size of the bill, even attempting to make a “moral case” for ensuring people who can work are doing so.

    But none of this gets around the fact that the UK has been dubbed the “sick man of Europe”. The rise in health-related economic inactivity since COVID – people leaving the workforce because they’re too ill – has certainly attracted widespread political attention. Some commentators have recently challenged the narrative however, pointing to differences in how economic activity is measured in other countries.

    We have researched the reasons why British workers leave their jobs after their health declines. When deciding whether to make cuts, the government should try to understand what is really happening with the health of the UK workforce.

    The overall picture is stark. More working-age people have a diagnosed major health problem than ever before and numbers are due to rise by 500,000 by 2030. Improvements in life expectancy have stalled and regional differences in health are large and growing.

    Almost one in four working-age people are classed as disabled, a diverse and growing minority. Meanwhile mental ill health rates are rising, particularly among young people.

    Poor work quality is one of the things that is harming health in many ways. Long hours, shift work and work-related stress all take their toll.

    In 2023-24, half of all UK work-related ill health was due to stress, anxiety or depression. Ultimately a bad job can be worse for health than no job.

    These problems are not unique to the UK. Other countries are grappling with similar issues but have been quicker to respond, including with high-quality occupational health systems and specific legislation around work-related “psychosocial risks”.

    These are factors like workloads, long hours, a lack of autonomy and support at work and workplace harassment. The UK has been slower to grasp the nettle and act.

    Our recent study explored why British workers quit their jobs following a decline in their health. We surveyed 1,117 business leaders, reviewed occupational health approaches and studied the employment journeys of 9,169 workers aged 16-60 over a four-year period.

    We found that nearly one in ten employees (9%) who experienced a decline in their health left their job within four years. Critically, nearly half of these exits were in the first 12 months, suggesting that once sick pay entitlements run out, people who have not recovered may face little choice but to quit and enter the welfare system.

    Workers grappling with multiple health challenges face even greater risks. Those with three or more conditions are 5.6 times more likely to quit work than their healthier peers. And those with poor mental health are almost twice as likely to leave.

    The role of healthy ‘job design’

    Our study found that workers without flexibility were four times more likely to leave after their health declined. And for those with low levels of control in their job, the risk was 3.7 times higher.

    A previous study found that people in insecure work, for example through a temporary or zero-hours contract, become workless at higher rates when their health deteriorates.

    Despite the fact that job design can determine whether people stay in work, in the UK it has largely been left to employers to decide the types of jobs and protections they offer. This hands-off approach to workforce health is what sets the UK apart – and not in a good way.

    In the Netherlands, employers carry the financial burden for statutory sick pay for up to 104 weeks. This has motivated them to help people return to work by adapting their jobs. In Australia, employers have to implement return-to-work programmes, assisted by regional coordinators.

    Our survey of UK business leaders revealed that while 64% recognise the economic impact of poor employee health, only 48% offer flexible working arrangements. And just 37% provide occupational health services. They acknowledged several workplace factors that exacerbate problems, such as excessive workloads (75%), long working hours (73%) and a lack of breaks (74%).

    But implementation of preventive measures is low. Only 36% assess mental health risks and 37% adjust workloads to ensure they are manageable.

    The state pension age is set to rise to 67 by 2028 and potentially to 71 by 2050, meaning more people may have to work for longer. Yet, as people live and work longer they are also becoming sicker.

    In this context there is an urgent need to promote healthy, sustainable work. This means achieving living and working conditions that can be sustained across a lifetime. It requires a joined-up employment and welfare system that supports people to take breaks when they need to, such as for health-related and caregiving needs.

    Practical measures include raising statutory sick pay and ensuring working time protections and flexible work rights mean everyone has a healthy work-life balance.

    Government must also legislate to ensure that employers take steps to address known work-related causes of ill health.

    The UK government’s Get Britain Working agenda aims to support inactive people, including those with long-term illnesses, back into suitable work. And the employment rights bill should strengthen worker protections. But these changes will take time. Cutting welfare now will affect hundreds of thousands of people who are out of work on health grounds, and do not have a viable alternative.

    Britain’s welfare bill is not about sudden mass exits from the workforce but rather a steady drip of workers leaving, compounded by insufficient protections and workplace insecurity. With a growing population of older workers and rising health challenges, guaranteeing good-quality work is no longer optional for the UK — it is essential.

    Alice Martin works for the Work Foundation, an independent UK think tank focused on overcoming labour market inequalities and improving working lives.

    Stavroula Leka is Professor of Organisations, Work & Health and Director of the Centre for Organisational Health and Well-being at Lancaster University. She is also the President of the European Academy of Occupational Health Psychology.

    Stavroula’s research is currently funded by the Institution of Occupational Safety & Health, ESRC, and the European Commission.

    – ref. Welfare cuts won’t succeed without healthier jobs – https://theconversation.com/welfare-cuts-wont-succeed-without-healthier-jobs-251556

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Lassa fever contact tracing underway

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    News story

    Lassa fever contact tracing underway

    UKHSA is tracing contacts of a person who travelled to England with Lassa fever and has since returned to Nigeria, with overall public risk remaining very low.

    The UK Health Security Agency has been informed under the International Health Regulations that an individual travelled to England from Nigeria while they were unwell with Lassa fever at the end of February. The individual returned to Nigeria where they were diagnosed.

    We are now working to identify people who were in contact with the affected individual while they were in the country.

    Lassa fever does not spread easily between people and the overall risk to the public is very low. If you have not been contacted by UKHSA then you are very unlikely to have had any exposure to Lassa fever and do not need to take action.

    Lassa fever causes acute infections which can range from very mild symptoms through to a severe viral haemorrhagic fever. People usually become infected with Lassa virus through exposure to food or household items contaminated with urine or faeces of infected rats – present in some West African countries where the disease is endemic. The virus can also be spread between people through contact with infectious bodily fluids.

    Dr Meera Chand, Deputy Director at the UK Health Security Agency, said:

    Our Health Protection Teams are working at pace to get in touch with people who were in contact with this individual while they were in England, to ensure they seek appropriate medical care and testing should they develop any symptoms. The infection does not spread easily between people, and the overall risk to the UK population is very low.

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    Published 7 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: AFRICA/KENYA – Bishop of Nakuru: “We do not know where the huge sum of money donated to churches by politicians comes from and we should be worried”

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Nairobi (Agenzia Fides) – “Let the church not be seen as a beneficiary while schools have no books, hospitals have no medicine and doctors and teachers have no pay,” said the Bishop of Nakuru, Cleophas Oseso, in his homily for Ash Wednesday, referring to donations made by politicians to the various Churches in Kenya. “We do not know where the huge sum of money donated to churches by politicians comes from and we should be worried,” warned the Bishop of Nakuru. Recalling the teaching of the Gospel (“When you donate with your right hand, your left hand should not know the amount donated,” Mt. 6:3), Bishop Oseso urged politicians to stop announcing or making public the amounts donated to the various Churches. “Let donations be done in secret to ensure the same is genuine and not a form for campaign or show-off.” The Bishop of Nakuru’s comments came at a time when Kenya is going through a deep economic crisis. Just today, March 7, the Association of Private Hospitals ordered the suspension of services at its affiliated facilities in protest against the lack of reimbursement by the State. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides, 7/3/2025)
    Share:

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Jones Healthcare and Technology Innovation Conference Announces Dr. Charity Dean as Keynote Speaker

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES and NEW YORK, March 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The highly anticipated Jones Healthcare and Technology Innovation Conference is pleased to announce Dr. Charity Dean, CEO, Founder, and Chairman of PHC Global, as a keynote speaker for the event. Dr. Dean will join Eric F. Trump, Executive Vice President of The Trump Organization, to headline the conference, which will take place April 8-9, 2025, at The Venetian Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada. This premier event will bring together leading healthcare and technology companies, institutional investors, and opinion leaders to explore the latest trends and innovations shaping both industries.

    Throughout the two-day conference, participants will engage in expert-led panels, corporate presentations, fireside chats, and one-on-one meetings covering advancements in healthcare and technology. Attendees will gain insights into how these rapidly evolving sectors are driving innovation and creating new opportunities.

    “Dr. Charity Dean’s expertise in biosecurity and public health aligns perfectly with the mission of this conference—to showcase innovative solutions that are transforming healthcare and technology,” said Alan Hill, CEO of Jones. “Combined with Eric Trump’s insights from the world of business, the conference will provide attendees with a well-rounded perspective on innovation, leadership, and the future of both industries.”

    Moe Cohen, Head of Investment Banking at Jones, added, “We are proud to host a conference that highlights the latest advancements in healthcare and technology and facilitates connections that drive progress. With keynote speakers of this caliber, attendees can expect thought-provoking discussions that inspire forward-thinking solutions.”

    In addition, Biotech TV and FINTECH.TV will be onsite conducting interviews with participating companies throughout the conference, providing exclusive media coverage and capturing insights from industry leaders.

    If you are interested in attending, please contact your Jones representative to inquire about an invitation.

    For more information about the conference, sponsorship opportunities, or to register, please email mdoyle@jonestrading.com.

    About Jones:

    JonesTrading Institutional Services, LLC (“Jones”) is a leading full-service investment banking firm providing a comprehensive suite of services, including capital markets, M&A, and strategic advisory to corporate clients. The firm is dedicated to building lasting partnerships by delivering innovative solutions, deep industry expertise, and tailored strategies that drive value and success. Founded in 1975, Jones has established itself as the global leader in block trading and a premier liquidity provider to institutional investors. The firm’s offerings also include derivatives trading, outsourced trading, electronic trading, prime services, private markets trading, and research/market intelligence. Member FINRA and SIPC.

    For more information, please visit www.jonestrading.com

    Human Resources
    HR@jonestrading.com

    The MIL Network –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Samsung UK hosts live virtual classroom event to mark National Careers Week

    Source: Samsung

     
    LONDON, UK – 07 March, 2025 – Samsung Electronics UK, in celebration of National Careers Week, welcomed secondary schools nationwide to join a free live virtual classroom event to spark curiosity about diverse future-focused careers in tech.
     
    Streamed live from Samsung KX, the careers lesson showcased cutting-edge technology and gave secondary school students the chance to hear from Samsung employees about their career journeys. Hosted by Samsung’s young emerging talent, schools were taken on a whistle-stop tour of Samsung KX, and were able to interact through live polls and a Q&A session with Samsung experts.
     

     
    Jessie Soohyun Park, Head of Corporate Responsibility at Samsung UK, said: “It was great to welcome hundreds of young people to our live virtual classroom event. Schools from across the UK heard first-hand from our employees about their career journeys in tech, and we hope they left the session feeling inspired. Samsung Solve for Tomorrow Next Gen is all about inspiring the next generation of innovators, and the 2025 programme is only just beginning. We welcome secondary schools across the UK  to sign up for the free resources and join the challenge – our theme for this year is Living Well: Tech for a Happier, Healthier World, and we can’t wait to see the tech for good ideas from young people.”
     

     
    Samsung Solve for Tomorrow Next Gen programme is designed for 11-15 year olds to inspire the next generation of innovators. Reaching over a third of secondary schools across the UK and Ireland, the programme offers interactive video lessons, design thinking, online safety and careers resources for teachers to use with their students, and a fun challenge where students and their schools can win fantastic tech prizes. Schools can register for the free programme here.
     
    For more information on Samsung KX visit: Discover New Samsung King’s Cross Space | Samsung UK

    MIL OSI Economics –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 7 March 2025 UHC-Partnership: Nigerians in Imo State are protected from financial hardship when accessing health services

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Favour Owuamanam, from Umuechetanmehe Amiri in Imo State, was 9 months pregnant and had been referred for a planned caesarean section due to the prospects of a high-risk delivery. When her labor started before her due date, she was rushed to Vaden Specialist Hospital for an emergency caesarean section and gave birth successfully. However, her baby had complications with neonatal asphyxia and jaundice and required additional care.

    The Imo State Health Insurance Agency facilitated the immediate transfer of the baby to the special care unit in Imo State Specialist Hospital. Both mother and baby were covered under health insurance and did not need to pay for any services.

    “Medical treatments are usually so high. I don’t know where I would have found the money to pay for my hospital bills. I am very grateful to the Imo State Health Insurance Agency Team,” said Favour.

    Marcus Moses and family, beneficiaries of the Imo State Health Insurance Agency. Photo by: WHO/Nigeria

    This is one of many health interventions by the Imo State Health Insurance Agency. The Agency has instituted one of the best and most responsive referral systems in Nigeria. In less than 10 months of implementation, over 516 cases have been referred through the health insurance programme, saving many lives through emergency surgery at no cost to the patient.

    Some of Nigeria’s poorest and most vulnerable populations are now able to access health care services without suffering financial hardship as a result. This is due to the passing of health insurance laws and the implementation of a health insurance programme that removes the burden of financial cost to the patient. Simultaneously, the quality of primary health care services is being strengthened, which has increased trust in and use of the services.

    This is a strong effort by the Government of Nigeria to ensure that its population is protected from financial hardship and is able to access timely and quality health services in line with the principles of universal health coverage (UHC).

    Engaging parliamentarians and the Executive to enable laws

    The enactment of mandatory health insurance laws and implementation of the Basic Health Care Provision Fund in 2023 has changed the lives of many poor and vulnerable Nigerians in Imo State.

    To advocate and make a strong case for the establishment of the Imo State Health Insurance Program, WHO, through the UHC Partnership, helped to establish the State Health Financing Unit and Technical Working Group in the State Ministry of Health. WHO technical staff then worked to build capacity and generate evidence.

    “The Imo State Government is putting mechanisms in place to ensure the protection of all citizens against financial risks associated with health care in the state. Unfortunately, the demand for health services is relentless and people end up becoming poorer to stay alive whenever they are sick. These actions will mitigate the use of the regressive out-of-pocket payments in health that pushes people into the vicious cycle of poverty, disease, and death,” said Dr Uchenna Ewelike, Executive Secretary, Imo State Health Insurance Agency.

    Sustained high-level advocacy by WHO resulted in better understanding and synergy between the Executive led by the State Governor and the parliamentarians, and this led to the speedy passage and ascent of the Imo State Health Insurance Bill into Law.

    “More investment in health, and health insurance specifically, has huge returns for the economy. This is demonstrated by an investment case for health in Imo State, developed by WHO, that shows up to 200% increase in real GDP and 200% increase in the number of jobs created over 5 years. As health is a human right and duty of the state, WHO will work with Imo State to develop a plan that will guide a progressive increase in coverage to achieve the UHC benchmark of at least 80% of the state population,” said Dr Walter Kazadi Mulombo, WHO Representative to Nigeria.

    Nigeria is one of more than 125 countries and areas to which the UHC Partnership helps deliver WHO support and technical expertise in advancing UHC through a PHC approach. The UHC Partnership represents over 3 billion people. It is supported and funded by Belgium, Canada, the European Union, France, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, Japan, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and WHO.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    March 8, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 7 March 2025 Departmental update WHO and Switzerland cement cooperation until 2028

    Source: World Health Organisation

    WHO and Switzerland have announced the renewal of their cooperation strategy for the period 2024-2028. In 2013, Switzerland became the first high-income country in the WHO European Region to pilot a cooperation strategy with WHO (hereafter referred to as the WHO-Switzerland Cooperation Strategy). In 2022, WHO and Switzerland jointly decided to update and renew this cooperation strategy, done on 4 March 2025 at the Regional Office of the WHO in Copenhagen, Denmark.

    Visit the WHO/Europe website to read the news release and learn more about the WHO—Switzerland country cooperation strategy 2024—2028.

    Read more about the WHO-Switzerland partnership for the global BioHub system.

    Barbara Schedler, Ambassador for Global Health at the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health, and Dr Henri P. Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, agreed on the way forward for closer collaboration. Photo by: WHO/EURO

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    March 8, 2025
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