Biomedicine & Singapore Society: Special Teaching Session

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Biomedicine And Singapore Society

Special Teaching Session

11 Nov

Seminar Room 4

7-740 Eh Sick Already See Doctor Or Sinseh?

8-840 Social Egg Freezing in Singapore

9-940 Clinical Trials in Singapore

 

Seminar Room 6

7-740 Is Dementia Village a Viable Option in Singapore?

8-840 Printing My 3(D) Parents

9-940 Therapy Without License

 

Seminar Room 4

7-740 Child Obesity

8-840 Obesity and Stigma

9-940 Mental Illness in a Posthuman World

 

Seminar Room 6

7-740 Do We Create Our Own Diseases: Economics of Biomedicine

8-840 Understanding the Institutionalization of Alternative Medicine

9-940 You Are What You Eat

 

All are welcome

Please register at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Professor Tommy Koh: 1st International Conference on Humanitarian Medical Missions

Venue:                           Academia, 20 College Road, Singapore General Hospital.

Title of Speech:           “Peace and Harmony Through Humanitarian Missions and Medical Diplomacy”

 

 

Salutations:

Dr Adrian Ooi, the Master of Ceremony.

Professor Fong Kok Yong, the Chairman of the Medical Board, SGH.

Professor S T Lee, the Chairman, Organising Committee

Professor Anantharaman Venkataraman, alias, Prof Anantha, the Co-Chairman, Organising Committee

Distinguished Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen

 

Thank You

1.     I would like to thank the organising committee for asking me to deliver the keynote address at this important conference.  When Prof S T Lee first asked me, I declined, pleading that I was not qualified to deliver the keynote address.  Professor Lee is, however, a person who never takes no for an answer.  Under his benign pressure, I had no choice but to change my mind and say yes.  My wife was, however, not convinced.

 

Three Reasons For Supporting ICHMM

2.     I have given my sceptical wife my three reasons for accepting Prof Lee’s request.  First, I am proud of the fact that Singapore is hosting the Inaugural International Conference on Humanitarian Medical Missions. This is an important initiative.  I am confident that this conference will be very successful.   I hope that in a few years' time, another country will host the second international conference and, in this way, ICHMM will become institutionalised.  The timing of this conference could not have been better chosen.  Three countries in West Africa, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone are fighting an outbreak of Ebola which threatens to spread to the rest of the world.  I am in awe of the courage of the doctors and nurses, including some in Singapore, who have risked their lives by volunteering to help those countries.  Let us give them a warm round of applause.

3.     Second, I champion volunteerism.  I have spent more than 20 years of my life in America.  I was tremendously impressed by the fact that America is a nation of volunteers.  The civic-mindedness of the American people has enriched American civil society and made America a participatory democracy.  I am happy to report that volunteerism is growing in Singapore. Our volunteers work in Singapore, in the region and the world.  Our volunteers come from all the different vocations and professions, including, medicine, dentistry and nursing.

4.     Third, I believe that as human beings, we have a duty to make this a more peaceful and a kinder world.  I believe in the wisdom of the ancient saying that under Heaven, all men are brothers and all women are sisters.  I also believe in the saying that those to whom much has been given, much is expected.  We have an ethical duty to use our talent, our skills, and our wealth to make this a better world.

 

Praise Four Institutions:  SIF

5.     I would like to praise four Singapore Institutions which have championed humanitarian medical missions.  Let me begin with the Singapore International Foundation or SIF. To date, SIF has undertaken 76 healthcare projects in 14 countries. Let me cite, by way of illustration, a project in Indonesia.  In Malang, Indonesia, SIF volunteers carried out a 7-year project (1997-2003) to enhance the emergency medical services in that region and to develop relevant skills to support the emergency department.  The local partners were the Faculty of Medicine of the Brawijaya University, the Department of Emergency Medicine of the Saiful Anwar Hospital and the Provincial Health Department of East Java.  A total of 96 volunteers from Singapore, led by Prof Anantha, made 17 training visits to Malang.  The project has led to a new system of triage and emergency medicine at Saiful Anwar Hospital, lower mortality rates in the emergency department and the launch of an entirely new ambulance service in Malang, which has greatly improved the response time for trauma patients. It also resulted in the formal introduction of a new medical specialty to Indonesia – one that is being actively discussed by other institutions there for implementation.

 

Singapore Armed Forces (SAF)

6.     The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) has a tradition of sending medical teams to help in emergency situations.  I want to refer the monster tsunami which struck Indonesia and other Indian Ocean littoral states on the 26th of December 2004. The scale of destruction in Banda Aceh and Meulaboh was beyond description. In response to Indonesia’s request for help, the SAF responded promptly and the SAF team, led by Bahasa-speaking officers, was the first to arrive. The SAF medical team was led by Colonel (Dr) Fan Swee Weng and included reservist specialist doctors from public healthcare institutions including SingHealth.  The team was sent to Ulee Kareng in Banda Aceh where it helped in treating many tsunami-related patients. Most of them had lost their homes and needed basic medical care.  In Meulaboh, the SAF established a Field Hospital.  In addition, SAF’s surgical team operated on patients at the Meulaboh Hospital. Altogether, the SAF medical team treated over 4,000 patients in the 2 places. 

 

SGH and KKH

7.     The Singapore General Hospital or SGH and the Kandang Kerbau Hospital for Women and Children or KKH, belong to the group called Singapore Health Services or SingHealth, in short.  The group supports volunteerism as part of its corporate social responsibility.  Members of the staff are encouraged to volunteer their time, in both local and international projects.  A staff member is allowed to take 14 days of volunteer leave if it is to participate in an approved project.  In 2011, KKH won the award for the Public Sector Volunteer of the Year, given by the National Volunteer and Philanthropy Centre (NVPC).  Over at SGH, Prof S T Lee and Professor Anantha have helped to make volunteerism a strong tradition at the hospital.

 

Four Role Models:  S T Lee

8.     Let me now turn from good institutions to four inspiring individuals.  We need role models in every field of human endeavour.  It is no different in the field of humanitarian medical missions.  The four individuals I wish to single out for special praise are Prof S.T. Lee, Prof Anantha, Assoc Professor Annette Jacobsen and Dr Tan Chi Chiu.  Prof Lee is a highly skilled plastic surgeon and educator.  For the past 22 years, he has led or participated in 22 volunteer missions to countries in South-East Asia, such as, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos and Myanmar, as well as to China.  In recognition of his contributions, he received the SIF Award from President S R Nathan, in 2006.

 

Prof Anantha

9.     Professor Anantha was the leader of the SIF project in Malang, Indonesia which I referred to earlier.  In addition to Malang, Prof Anantha, has led or participated in many volunteer medical missions.  He led a medical team, under the Singapore Civil Defence Force, to help the victims of the earthquake, in Baguio, the Philippines, in 1990.  In 2001, he went to help the victims of another earthquake in Gujarat, India.  He is currently leading a team from SingHealth, on a two-year project, to set up a Disaster Medical Training System in Makassar, Sulawesi, Indonesia.

 

Prof Anette Jacobsen

10.Dr Anette Jacobsen is Norway’s gift to Singapore.  She met her Singaporean husband, Dr Mark Lu, when they were studying medicine in Dublin, Ireland.  She is a paediatric surgeon and works at KKH.  In 2001, she went on her first volunteer mission to Cambodia.  Since then, she has been on over 20 missions to Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos and Myanmar.  She volunteers with SIF, Temasek Foundation and the Taiwanese charity called the Tzu Chi Foundation for Compassionate Medical Relief.

 

Dr Tan Chi Chiu

11.Dr Tan Chi Chiu is an eminent gastroenterologist in private practice and a former director of the Singapore International Foundation.  Dr Tan is one of our most experienced medical volunteers.  Between 1986 and 2013, he had participated in 14 humanitarian medical missions, in 12 of which, as the leader or medical director.  Dr Tan believes that Singapore can do more and should benchmark itself against Japan and Korea.  He would like to see the creation of a  national network and resource of medical volunteers, which could then support relief missions of all organizations which need medical teams.

 

Conclusion:

12.We live in a world which is full of conflict, mistrust and misunderstanding.  We, the people of the world, are not powerless in the face of such challenges.  We can, each in our way, promote better understanding and friendship between peoples and countries.  One way to do this is through international volunteerism.  The work which our doctors, dentists, nurses, therapists, and other allied professionals do, when they go on medical missions, is invaluable.  As they say, action speaks louder than words.  Through your kind deeds, you have crossed geographical, political, cultural and linguistic barriers.  Through your kind deeds you have replaced suffering with relief, despair with hope, taught the trainers and left a positive legacy.  Most important of all, you have taught us to believe that we live in one world and we belong to one human family.

13.Singapore is a very small country.  It is so small that the leader of a neighbouring country once described us as a little red dot on the map.  We are, however, not too small to help our neighbours.  We lie in the heart of Southeast Asia and we are profoundly committed to ASEAN.  We want Southeast Asia to be a region of peace and prosperity.  We want to strengthen the ASEAN family.  I thank Singapore’s doctors, nurses, dentists and other medical personnel for going on humanitarian medical missions to our neighbouring countries.  I salute you for your contributions to regional peace and harmony through medical diplomacy.

14.Thank you very much.

. . . . . .

Prof Tommy Koh: 10th Anniversary of the USSFTA

Singapore and the United States: Answering the Business

Transformation Challenges for the Next Decade

Seminar co-organised by Amcham and SBF

Speech by Professor Tommy Koh, Singapore’s Chief Negotiator,

US-Singapore Free Trade Agreement

Salutations

1. Excellencies

2. Mr James Andrade, Chairman of AmCham

3. Ms Judith Fergin, CEO of AmCham

4. Mr Ho Meng Kit, CEO of SBF

5. Amb Kirk Wagar, US Ambassador

6. Mr Ong Ye Kung, Deputy Chief Negotiator, USSFTA

7. Mr Douglas Foo, President of SMF

8. Dr Ahmad Magad, Chairman of Panel 1

9. Dr Parag Khanna, Chairman of Panel 2

10. Ladies and Gentlemen

(II) Celebrating USSFTA’s 10th Anniversary

1. Judith Fergin has invited me to speak to you in my capacity as the Chief Negotiator for Singapore, in the USSFTA negotiations.

2. President Bill Clinton and PM Goh Chok Tong agreed to launch a negotiation to conclude the USFTA, in Brunei, on 16 Nov 2000.

3. I was appointed as the Chief Negotiator on 16 Nov 2000. Ong Ye Kung was appointed the Deputy Chief Negotiator at a later date.

4. The 1st round of the USSFTA negotiations was held in Washington DC from 4-21 December 2000.

5. The 11th and final round was held in Washington DC from 11-19 Nov 2002.

6. The USSFTA was signed in Washington on 6 May 2003 by President Bush and PM Goh.

7. The USSFTA passed the House of Reps on 24 July 2003 by 272-155 votes.

8. The USSFTA passed the Senate on 31 July 2003 by 66-31 votes.

9. The USSFTA came into force on 1 Jan 2004.

(III) USSFTA Is A Success Story

1. The USSFTA is a great success story.

2. First, the USSFTA has boosted trade between our two countries. In 2012, bilateral trade was $118.8 billion. US exports of goods to Singapore have increased by over 85%. US exports of services to Singapore have increased by over 100%. Singapore’s exports of services to the US have increased by 104%. However, Singapore’s exports of goods to the US have fallen by 26%.

3. Second, the USSFTA has had an even more dramatic impact on the two-way investment picture. By the end of 2013, US investment in Singapore reached US$154 billion. This is bigger than the US investments in Japan and in Australia. Singapore is the US’ No. 1 investment destination in the Asia Pacific. There are 3,600 US companies in Singapore.

4. You will be surprised to know that Singapore has become the 4th largest Asian investor in the US, after Japan, Australia and South Korea. According to PM Lee, Singapore companies have supported about 40,000 jobs in the US. For example, Keppel AmFels, which manufactures equipment for the offshore and marine industry, is currently one of the largest employers in South Texas, with close to 2,500 workers.

5. Third, the USSFTA is good for the political and security relationship between our two countries. As PM Goh said recently, “ultimately, trade is strategy. The FTA was for geopolitical reasons, not just about lowering tariffs and more trade.”

(IV) Conclusion

1. I want to leave you with 3 concluding thoughts.

2. First, as the USSFTA has demonstrated, free trade and investment benefits all countries. We need to convey this message to the members of the US Congress, organised labour and other stakeholders in the U.S.

3. Second, we support President Obama’s Pivot to Asia or Rebalancing with Asia. My understanding is that the policy is pro-US but not anti-China. The US supports the ASEAN vision that our region should be open to all but aligned to none. As a resident power, the US wishes to continue to play a leadership role in the region. This is welcomed by the region.

4. Third, the US policy cannot be uni-dimensional and focus only on security and the military. It must be a comprehensive engagement, involving business and economics, culture, education, environment, etc. We need more investment from America and more trade with America. Economically, the US is falling behind. From being no. 1, it is today ASEAN’s 4th largest trading partner.

. . . . . . .

Fellow’s Tea with Mr Terence Chia

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Tembusu College Fellow’s Tea

Mr Terence Chia

5pm , Tuesday

7th October 2014

Master’s Common Lounge,

Level 3, Residential Block

Refreshments will be served.

Only 30 seats available!

Please register at: dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Hosted by Dr Kelvin Pang & Dr Kuan

Terence served as an Industrial Relations Officer in the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) previously. He worked closely with union leaders, members and management partners to handle grievances, resolve conflicts and negotiate collective agreements to secure the welfare of workers.

He also involved in developing programmes to enhance the leadership of union leaders and in expanding union outreach to Professionals, Managers and Executives.

Terence will be sharing his perspectives on Singapore’s system for industrial relations, the role of unions in Singapore,and the importance of relationship-building before, during and after negotiations.

More information at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Photos taken may be used for Tembusu publicity materials

Fellow’s Tea with Dr Cheong Wai Kit

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Tembusu College Fellow’s Tea

Dr Cheong Wai Kit

3pm, Thursday

2nd October 2014

Master’s Common Lounge,

Level 3, Residential Block

Refreshments will be served.

Only 30 seats available!

Please register at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Hosted by Prof. Prakash Hande

To screen or not to screen: cancer surgeon’s perspective

Dr Cheong Wai Kit is a Senior consultant in the Division of Colorectal Surgery, Department of Surgery, National University Hospital . He is also Clinical Lecturer at the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore. Besides his daily work as a colorectal surgeon and lecturer, Dr Cheong has been heavily involved in raising awareness month recently to reach out to the young to spread the importance of early screening to the old. He is also a member of the Public Education Committee of the Singapore Cancer Society. Dr Cheong graduated from the University of Malaya and obtained his postgraduate qualifications from the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Photos taken may be used for
Tembusu publicity materials

Master’s Tea with Mrs Lim Hwee Hua

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Tembusu College Master’s Tea

Mrs Lim Hwee Hua

3pm, Tuesday

28th October 2014

Master’s Common Lounge,

Level 3, Residential Block

Refreshments will be served.

Please sign up at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Hwee Hua was elected to Parliament in December 1996 and served till May 2011, during which she served in various roles – Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office, Second Minister for Finance and for Transport, Deputy Speaker of Parliament, and Chairman of the Public Accounts Commitee.

Hwee Hua is currently a non-executive director of UOB Bank, Jardine Cycle & Carriage Ltd, Stamford Land Corporation and BW Group Limited, and Honorary Chairman of SIAS. She is a Senior Advisor to Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts and a Member of the Asia Advisor Board of Westpac Institutional Bank.

Drawing on her experience in the Government and Private Sector, Hwee Hua published her book Government in Business: Friend or Foe? in October 2013. She holds a Master of Arts (Honours) in Mathematics/Engineering from the University of Cambridge and a Master of Business Administration, major in Finance, from the Anderson School of Management, University of California at Los Angles.

Photos taken may be used for
Tembusu publicity materials

WIP with Dr. Michiel Baas

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Work In Progress Seminar

The New Indian Man

Dr. Michiel Baas

23rd October 2014, 6pm

Level 1 Common Lounge

Register at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

India’s economic growth has come with new ideas of the ‘ideal’ male body.

Portrayals of such bodies have become extremely prevalent. In this talk I will deiscuss what this new ‘visibility’ reveals about India. Using examples from recent fieldwork in a small neighbourhood gym in Delhi among members of a bodybuilding federation., I will focus on the profession of fitness trainer. Who are these Indians who find employment in the fitness industry, where do they come from in terms of personal and family backgrounds, and where are they heading? The shapes and size of their bodies is not only a new way of generating income, it can also lead to social mobility. But, even though this body can make up for an apparent lack in ‘middle classness’, climbing up the social ladder is complex. The process of the new Man climbing reveals the complex layers of class and status in Indian society.

Fellow’s Tea with Mr. Davide Benvenuti

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Tembusu College
Fellow’s Tea

In association with the Living Online Mediastream

Davide Benvenuti

6.30pm, Wednesday

29th October 2014

Reading Room

Level B1, Learn Lobe

Refreshments will be served

No registration necessary

Davide Benvenuti is a classically trained animator accomplished in 2D animation, with practical training and experience in 3D developed at Dreamworks Studio, Los Angeles. Currently he is an Assistant Professor at Nanyang Technological University in the School of Art, Design and Media. Previously he was engaged as a 3D Senior Animator at Ubisoft in Singapore. Before coming to Singapore he worked as Senior Animator at Disneytoon Studios in Sydney.

He has organised and conducted forums on lip-sync and realistic speech of animated characters, using animation and live action examples approaches and methodologies for handling long scenes and inherent acting problems and animation. He received special credit for the character “Myrtle” in “Lilo & Stitch 2” (2005). A list of his movie credits iss available from his IMDB page at: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0073045/.

Master’s Tea with Dr. Irene Lee

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Tembusu College Master’s Tea

Dr. Irene Lee

3pm, Monday

13th October 2014

Master’s Common Lounge,

Level 3, Residential Block

Refreshments will be served.

Only 30 seat available!

Please sign up at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Dr. Irene S.M.Lee is presently an entrepreneur in the renewable energy/solar and art businesses. Art is her passion and she has won art competitions and exhibited internationally. Her latest venture is founder and CEO of a social enterprise Little Sun Asia that combines art and solar power (www.littlesun.asia). She is also the President of the Harvard Club of Singapore, and Vice President of the Distinguished Universities Alumni League (DUAL).

Dr. Lee obtained her Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Architecture degrees at the National University of Singapore, Masters of Architecture in Urban Design at Cornell University, and doctorate at Harvard University where she majored in environmental management and technology. Subsequently, she was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship at the United Nations University in Tokyo to do research on urban ecosystems, a postdoctoral fellowship at the Tokyo Medical and Dental University for interdisciplinary research, and a third postdoctorate at kassel University in Germany for research on environmental sustainability.

Dr. Lee has held top management positions in the environmental and renewable energy industries, and has project experience in Europe, USA,China,India,Indonesia,Korea,Malaysia,Taiwan,Thailand and Vietnam, in the areas of environmental management, architecture/engineering, infrastructure/urban planning and renewable energy. She was also a scientist at the University of Heidelberg in Germany.

Photos taken may be used for
Tembusu publicity materials