Vietnam’s UN peacekeeping staff in South Sudan (Photo: VNA) Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam, at the request of the United Nations, has received and successfully treated a UN staff member who contracted COVID-19 while working in a
regional country and was in critical condition.
The patient was brought to Vietnam by a
plane run by the UN Emergency Chartered Medical
Evacuation Services (MEDEVAC).
After undergoing intensive treatment in a strict quarantine process, and thanks to expertise and dedicated
care of Vietnamese doctors and nurses, the patient have fully recovered and been discharged
from hospital. The UN staff member left Vietnam on June 15 to come back to work.
It was the first time Vietnam has received
and treated a patient as a UN staff member under the MEDEVAC mechanism, marking a new
development step in the Vietnam – UN comprehensive partnership. The deed once again
affirmed Vietnam’s humane tradition, willingness and commitment to
contribute to international cooperation in coping with the pandemic.
UN leaders and representatives at
different levels appreciated and expressed their gratitude to Vietnam’s good will and spirit of
international solidarity. They spoke highly of the Vietnamese health sector’s
professional capacity and contributions to the care and protection of people’s
health as well as expanding international cooperation and
improving the country’s position.
Lieut. Col Nguyen Thi Minh Phuong holds a South Sudan child during her first patrol as a military observer in December 2019 (Photo: VNA) Especially, UN Under-Secretary General Atul Khare lauded the significance of the deed, saying it helped the UN fulfill its tasks in the region. He also
expressed wish to receive more support from Vietnam in the near future.
On the occasion, he also
thanked Vietnam for continuing to send medical workers to the leve-2 field hospital in South
Sudan and giving COVID-19 vaccine shots to them before departure.
MEDEVAC was set up with the aim of creating a global framework to provide emergency evacuation for severely ill UN staff members who require a level of care not available
at their locations. Many countries in and outside the region engaged in
the reception and treatment for them via the MEDEVAC mechanism.
The UN, through the COVAX
Facility, had already sent nearly 2.5 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to Vietnam, out of a
total of 38.9 million doses it committed to provide for the country free of charge.
Since its admission to the UN in
1977, Vietnam has received great support and assistance from UN organs to overcome war
consequences, reconstruct the country and in the renewal process, especially improve production
capacity, develop human resources, science-technology, integrate into the world
and fulfill global development goals.
Together with offering
medical supplies to countries worldwide in the past year, Vietnam has and will
continue contributing to international solidarity to surmount the pandemic./.
Source: VietnamPlus
