From October, subsidies at community
hospitals will be enhanced
to align with those of acute hospitals,
and allowed to be used for advanced
diagnostics, said Health
Minister Ong Ye Kung.
This will minimise delays in the
transfer to step-down care, he
added.
He was speaking on Sept 24 at
the National Medical Excellence
Awards ceremony, where outstanding
clinicians, clinician scientists
and other healthcare professionals
were recognised.
In the debate on the Ministry of
Health’s budget in March, Mr Ong
had said the community hospital
subsidy framework would be
aligned with the acute hospital
subsidy framework so that patients
receive the same subsidy
rate of 50 per cent to 80 per cent
throughout their inpatient stay.
He had also said that more diagnostic
services, such as CT and
MRI scans, and relevant drugs
would be subsidised at community
hospitals.
In his speech at the awards dinner,
Mr Ong said that driven by the
ageing population with changing
healthcare needs, “care is increasingly
anchored in communities,
health is being built up outside of
hospitals, and new care models involving
partnership between hospitals
and community partners are
emerging”.
To recognise these changes, the
Ministry of Health introduced the
new National Community Care
Excellence Team Award at this
year’s event. The award recognises
teams that have contributed significantly
to improving community
health and raised awareness of
preventive health in the community
care setting.
The first recipient in this category
is the SingHealth Community
Hospitals (SCH) team leading the
Social Prescribing Programme, in
partnership with the Agency for
Integrated Care, SkillsFuture Singapore
and several active ageing
centres.
The team integrates social prescriptions
with clinical care as a
novel approach to improving
health outcomes for seniors. The
seniors are prescribed social support
programmes or activities to
supplement medical treatments.
The team’s work aligns with the
objectives of Age Well SG, a national
programme to help seniors
age well at home and in the community.
Associate Professor Lee Kheng
Hock, SCH’s deputy chief executive
officer overseeing education
and community partnerships, told
The Straits Times that social prescribing
addresses a senior’s social
needs, such as loneliness, housing
and other social issues, “which can
significantly affect patient wellbeing
and recovery”.
Running a similar initiative
called the Neighbours for Active
Living Programme, Changi General
Hospital (CGH) taps the close-knit
ties fostered with volunteers
and neighbours to provide companionship
and social support to
vulnerable seniors.
Pioneered by CGH in tandem
with the South East Community
Development Council in 2013, the
programme has provided place-based
care and personalised support
to more than 14,000 residents
of 18 communities in eastern Singapore
over the last 10 years.
Led by Ms Shirlyn Su Chang, assistant
director of CGH’s department
of health and social integration,
the team received the National
Clinical Excellence Team
Award. This is the fourth time that
CGH has been given the award; it
has won it with different teams
since 2021.
Both teams and six individuals
received their respective awards
from Mr Ong at the dinner at Pan
Pacific Singapore on Sept 24.
Singapore General Hospital
(SGH) chief quality officer Tan
Ban Hock took the National Outstanding
Clinician Award for his
work in elevating the hospital’s infectious
diseases service to world-class
standard.
Professor Tan is particularly interested
in immunocompromised
patients and established the treatment
of transplant infectious disease
into SGH’s infectious disease
department. He was also involved
in the writing and revision of protocols
in various transplant programmes.
The National Outstanding Clinician
Scientist Award went to two
recipients – Professor Jerry Chan,
director of KK Research Centre at
KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital
and director of the Sing-
Health Duke-NUS Maternal and
Child Health Research Institute;
and Professor Jodhbir Singh Mehta,
the Singapore National Eye
Centre’s deputy chief executive
officer overseeing research.
A clinician scientist in obstetrics
and gynaecology, Prof Chan has
made contributions including in
research on foetal stem cells and
gene therapies targeting inherited
diseases.
Prof Mehta, one of the world’s
leading specialists on corneal diseases
and refractive surgical procedures,
was involved in projects
that developed new surgical instruments,
devices and laser procedures
for corneas.
Meanwhile, Professor Tan Suat
Hoon from the National Skin Centre
received the National Outstanding
Clinician Mentor Award.
In a career spanning more than
three decades, she mentored
young clinicians and created a fertile
environment for dermatological
research.
She not only established the
sub-speciality of dermatopathology
(the study into structural and
compositional changes that occur
in skin disease) and developed a
training programme, but also grew
the unit to a team of five highly
trained dermatopathologists.
The National Outstanding Clinician
Educator Award went to Associate
Professor Gerald Chua of
Ng Teng Fong Hospital and Adjunct
Professor Lau Tang Ching
from the National University Hospital.
The Ministry of Health lauded
them for their contributions to the
education and training of clinicians
and healthcare staff, and
support in developing skills and
competencies for high standards
of care and treatment.
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