(From left) Professor Fabian Yap, deputy director of the SingHealth Duke-NUS Maternal and Child Health Research Institute; Ms Jennie Chua, chairman of Temasek Foundation’s health and education executive board; Health Minister Ong Ye Kung and Taguig City Mayor Lani Cayetano after the signing of the pact in Taguig City, Manila, on Aug 16. ST PHOTO GIN TAY
MANILA – Singapore’s KK Women’s
and Children’s Hospital (KKH) will
leverage its own experience running
a breast milk donation depot
with 24-hour access to build up an
existing breast milk bank for the
city of Taguig in Manila.
It is one of the initiatives in a
memorandum of understanding
(MOU) signed on Aug 16 between
Taguig City and SingHealth Duke-
NUS Maternal and Child Health
Research Institute (MCHRI), led
by KKH.
The agreement, which also involves
philanthropic organisation
Temasek Foundation, includes infrastructure
planning and capacity
building in Taguig’s maternal and
child health facilities, as well as nutrition
research and the development
of health programmes tailored
to the needs of the city,
which has a population of more
than 1.2 million.
The MOU was one of two pacts
signed that day, with the second
being a partnership between Taguig
City’s government, private
health technology firm CareSpan
Asia and Temasek Foundation,
which provided a $2.12 million injection
of funds.
The pilot programme will see CareSpan
providing the city government
access to its advanced care
platform, which is composed of an
electronic medical records system
and telemedicine capabilities.
This is expected to benefit
350,000 underserved citizens, and
will streamline the filing of Philippine
Health Insurance claims for
patients in the city, among other
things.
Both signings took place on the
sidelines of President Tharman
Shanmugaratnam’s three-day state
visit to the Philippines. They were
witnessed by Singapore’s Minister
for Health Ong Ye Kung and Taguig
City Mayor Lani Cayetano at the
Grand Hyatt Manila.
As part of work on the maternal
and child healthcare pact, a team
of experts from KKH and MCHRI
have joined a symposium on the
topic, and assessed local facilities
earlier in the week.
Taguig’s human milk bank, established
in 2010, is where breastfeeding
mothers can donate breast
milk to be given to babies in need
in Taguig Pateros District Hospital.
KKH has its own milk bank, established in 2017, to help new mothers
who cannot produce milk for their
babies.
MCHRI deputy director Fabian
Yap noted that proper nutrition is
the foundation of good health, and
that “breast milk is the gold standard
for infant nutrition”.
“However, not all mothers are
able to breastfeed, and not all infants
have access to the nutrition
that they need to thrive... To address
this, we will focus on enhancing
(Taguig’s) milk bank ecosystem,”
Professor Yap said at the
signing ceremony.
“We want to collaborate and lead
in nutrition and milk banking – areas
that are essential to the health
and well-being of both mothers
and their children.”
He added that this involves not
only collecting and storing human
milk, but also exploring the possibility
of giving customised donor
milk, tailored to the specific age
and growth needs of individuals.
To further enhance the milk
bank ecosystem, KKH will partner
Temasek Foundation to set up a
best-in-class freezer locker system
that will allow for the safe and efficient
storage and distribution of
breast milk.
“The system will ensure that donor
milk is available when and
where it is needed, helping to
bridge the gap for infants who
would otherwise go without,” said
Prof Yap.
While the MCHRI has partnerships
with several other overseas
institutions, this is its first collaboration
with a city.
“We will work with Taguig’s obgyn
(obstetrician-gynaecologist)
teams and establish streamlined
workflows – from the moment the
woman discovers she is pregnant,
through childbirth and into the
postnatal period, she will receive
coordinated, continuous care,” he
added.
Said Mayor Cayetano at the signing
ceremony: “Hopefully, with the
success of this programme, we can
also inspire other local government
units to follow suit and put
maternal and child care as a priority...
The goal is to have an impact
on nation building.”
Replicating such projects was a
sentiment echoed by President
Tharman later in the day, when he
delivered opening remarks before
he was briefed on the Taguig City
partnerships that were signed earlier.
“I am sure if we can do this very
well in Taguig City, we can also
scale it up and do it elsewhere,”
said Mr Tharman.
On the first day of his visit on
Aug 15, the governments of Singapore
and the Philippines inked
pacts to strengthen cooperation on
carbon credits and the development
of healthcare workers, as the
two countries celebrated the 55th
anniversary of diplomatic ties.
Earlier in the day on Aug 16, he
met business leaders and government
officials. After the briefing,
he attended the Singapore Red
Cross 75th anniversary exhibition,
followed by a National Day reception
for around 200 Singaporeans
living in the Philippines.
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