Venezuela: 587 atendidos a través del programa “La Salud va a la Escuela” en el estado Sucre

Venezuela/Diciembre de 2017/Autor: Richard Mendoza/Fuente: MPPE

Para brindar la atención necesaria a la población estudiantil en concordancia con los objetivos que persigue el «Programa la Salud Va a la Escuela” y además  con la finalidad de valorar la salud como derecho social fundamental establecido en la Constitución de la República Bolivariana de Venezuela, se llevó a cabo una jornada médica asistencial que benefició a 587 atendidos EB General de San Juan de Macarapana

Formó parte de los lineamientos emanados del Ministerio del Poder Popular para la Educación (MPPE) y ejecutada por la Zona Educativa del estado Sucre dirigida por la profesora Nircia Villegas. Cumpliendo de esta manera con las políticas educativas orientadas al fortalecimiento de la educación y valoración de la salud.

En función de la programación para la ejecución de la Jornada Médica en las instituciones educativas, el Willian Palomo, Coordinador Asistencial de IPASME Cumaná , expresó que en esta ocasión le correspondió a la Parroquia San Juan de Macarapana, desde las instalaciones de la Escuela Bolivariana Guaranache Arriba donde los niños, niñas, adolescentes y comunidad en general contaron con la atención de las diferentes especialidades médicas entre estas medicina general, odontología, traumatología, pediatría, fisiatría, dermatología, ginecología, entre otras que permitirán la valoración de los casos de salud.

Igualmente agregó que en esta oportunidad la actividad contó con el suministro de medicamentos.

Yinet Tovar, Supervisora del Circuito No 24 San Juan, expresó palabras de satifacción por del trabajo exitoso que viene realizando la Zona Educativa y el IPASME para brindar la atención a nuestra población estudiantil.

Además resaltó que se registró un alto número de personas atendidas entre niños, adolescentes, jóvenes y adultos,”La jornada de hoy fue de gran apoyo para los habitantes de la parroquia San Juan de Macarapana”, dijo.

Fuente: http://me.gob.ve/index.php/noticias/89-noticias-2027/diciembre/3791-587-atendidos-a-traves-del-programa-la-salud-va-a-la-escuela-en-el-estado-sucre

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África: Quirónsalud fomenta la educación sanitaria en África

África / www.diariodicen.es / 10 de Mayo de 2017

El Grupo Quirónsalud, en colaboración con su Fundación, el Ministerio de Sanidad, la Universidad Nacional de Guinea Ecuatorial y la ONG +QSalud, organizan, del 8 al 11 de mayo, el IV Congreso de Ciencias Médicas y de la Salud. En la edición de este año, bajo el lema «Profundizando en la investigación para avanzar en la excelencia», se persigue el objetivo de mejorar la formación en sanidad en África.

El evento está dirigido a profesionales y alumnos de enfermería y medicina, y constará de mesas de debate, coloquios, charlas informativas y talleres científicos orientados a la educación en la práctica clínica y el manejo de equipos y logística sanitaria. El fin que pretenden los responsables de la organización de estas jornadas es el de promover el intercambio de conocimientos y la de garantizar el aprovechamiento de los recursos sanitarios de Guinea Ecuatorial.

Desde el Grupo y la Fundación afirman que esta iniciativa demuestra el compromiso que han adquirido con la formación en salud y con el fomento de la investigación de los trabajadores sanitarios del país africano, cuya labor, con el aprendizaje que están llevando a cabo, puede traducirse en salvar vidas.

La cuarta edición de este congreso ha surgido amparado por la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) y su proyecto Prioridades para la Acción Internacional, con el que se pretende que el acceso a la atención sanitaria de calidad sea universal.

 Fuente:https://www.diariodicen.es/201705/quironsalud-fomenta-la-educacion-sanitaria-en-africa/

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Where the Democrats Go From Here

By: Bernie Sanders

Millions of Americans registered a protest vote on Tuesday, expressing their fierce opposition to an economic and political system that puts wealthy and corporate interests over their own. I strongly supported Hillary Clinton, campaigned hard on her behalf, and believed she was the right choice on Election Day. But Donald J. Trump won the White House because his campaign rhetoric successfully tapped into a very real and justified anger, an anger that many traditional Democrats feel.

I am saddened, but not surprised, by the outcome. It is no shock to me that millions of people who voted for Mr. Trump did so because they are sick and tired of the economic, political and media status quo.

Working families watch as politicians get campaign financial support from billionaires and corporate interests — and then ignore the needs of ordinary Americans. Over the last 30 years, too many Americans were sold out by their corporate bosses. They work longer hours for lower wages as they see decent paying jobs go to China, Mexico or some other low-wage country. They are tired of having chief executives make 300 times what they do, while 52 percent of all new income goes to the top 1 percent. Many of their once beautiful rural towns have depopulated, their downtown stores are shuttered, and their kids are leaving home because there are no jobs — all while corporations suck the wealth out of their communities and stuff them into offshore accounts.

Working Americans can’t afford decent, quality child care for their children. They can’t send their kids to college, and they have nothing in the bank as they head into retirement. In many parts of the country they can’t find affordable housing, and they find the cost of health insurance much too high. Too many families exist in despair as drugs, alcohol and suicide cut life short for a growing number of people.

President-elect Trump is right: The American people want change. But what kind of change will he be offering them? Will he have the courage to stand up to the most powerful people in this country who are responsible for the economic pain that so many working families feel, or will he turn the anger of the majority against minorities, immigrants, the poor and the helpless?

Will he have the courage to stand up to Wall Street, work to break up the “too big to fail” financial institutions and demand that big banks invest in small businesses and create jobs in rural America and inner cities? Or, will he appoint another Wall Street banker to run the Treasury Department and continue business as usual? Will he, as he promised during the campaign, really take on the pharmaceutical industry and lower the price of prescription drugs?

I am deeply distressed to hear stories of Americans being intimidated and harassed in the wake of Mr. Trump’s victory, and I hear the cries of families who are living in fear of being torn apart. We have come too far as a country in combating discrimination. We are not going back. Rest assured, there is no compromise on racism, bigotry, xenophobia and sexism. We will fight it in all its forms, whenever and wherever it re-emerges.

I will keep an open mind to see what ideas Mr. Trump offers and when and how we can work together. Having lost the nationwide popular vote, however, he would do well to heed the views of progressives. If the president-elect is serious about pursuing policies that improve the lives of working families, I’m going to present some very real opportunities for him to earn my support.

Let’s rebuild our crumbling infrastructure and create millions of well-paying jobs. Let’s raise the minimum wage to a living wage, help students afford to go to college, provide paid family and medical leave and expand Social Security. Let’s reform an economic system that enables billionaires like Mr. Trump not to pay a nickel in federal income taxes. And most important, let’s end the ability of wealthy campaign contributors to buy elections.

In the coming days, I will also provide a series of reforms to reinvigorate the Democratic Party. I believe strongly that the party must break loose from its corporate establishment ties and, once again, become a grass-roots party of working people, the elderly and the poor. We must open the doors of the party to welcome in the idealism and energy of young people and all Americans who are fighting for economic, social, racial and environmental justice. We must have the courage to take on the greed and power of Wall Street, the drug companies, the insurance companies and the fossil fuel industry.

When my presidential campaign came to an end, I pledged to my supporters that the political revolution would continue. And now, more than ever, that must happen. We are the wealthiest nation in the history of the world. When we stand together and don’t let demagogues divide us up by race, gender or national origin, there is nothing we cannot accomplish. We must go forward, not backward.

Taken from: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/12/opinion/bernie-sanders-where-the-democrats-go-from-here.html?_r=0

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