Vietnam has strong, durable institutions for protecting public health: Brookings website

Vietnam has proven that it has strong and durable institutions that could protect the country’s public health through future pandemics, according to an article recently published on the website brookings.edu of the US-based Brookings Institution.
Vietnam has strong, durable institutions for protecting public health: Brookings website ảnh 1A health worker handles samples for COVID-19 testing at the Hanoi Centre for Disease Control (Photo: VNA)
Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam has proven that it hasstrong and durable institutions that could protect the country’s public healththrough future pandemics, according to an article recently published on the websitebrookings.edu of the US-based Brookings Institution.

It noted that when the threat of COVID-19 dawned, the government quicklyordered and strictly enforced border closures. Contact tracing was extensivefor all suspected cases of COVID-19, and all individuals suspected to have beenexposed to the virus were identified and isolated.

To implement this strategy of mass, coordinated quarantine,including cooking and delivering meals to those in isolation, employingsanitation efforts, contact tracing, and testing, required a large humanresource capacity, which the Vietnamese government recruited among medicalstudents and workers, party-affiliated social organisations, and the military.Social media, widely available in Vietnam, was used to promote public healthmessaging and dispel misinformation.

While Vietnam’s current outbreak isdwarfed by those in neighbours like Indonesia and the Philippines, the government continues to enforcequarantine regulations for all traced, suspected cases and strict regulationson foreign entry, according to the writing.

The article said the Vietnamese government is demonstratingthat it can deploy the necessary policies and resources of the state to thestrategies it chooses, whether that is protecting public health during a globalpandemic, or increasing accountability and transparency of governance toattract foreign investors. Certainly, the Vietnamese government’s public healthapproach was impressive, and the country was uniquely positioned to take on thechallenge of COVID-19.

The recent outbreaks will require Vietnam’s public healthministries and surveillance capabilities to maintain strong coordination withgovernment leadership as there is continued pressure to reopen the country toforeign tourists and business.

Vietnam has proven that it has strong and durableinstitutions that could protect the country’s public health through futurepandemics, without relying on vaccines alone.

The Vietnamese government has demonstrated it can enact aneffective preventative public health model through the structures of its stateif it so chooses, and perhaps that’s the lesson for other governments to learnif countries are each to prepare state-led pandemic responses in the future,the writing added./.
VNA

See more

Solar panels in Indonesia. (Photo: Shutterstock)

Indonesia keeps commitment on energy transition

The US withdrawal from the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) will not reduce the nine other countries' commitment to support Indonesia to achieve the net-zero target date by 2060.

Indonesia's Ministry of Transport has prepared 30,451 buses to serve the homecoming flow. (Photo: VNA)

Indonesia gears up for Idul Fitri celebrations

The Indonesian government has implemented measures to ensure stable prices and adequate supplies before Ramadan and particularly for Idul Fitri. Essential commodities including rice, cooking oil, sugar, and meat have seen increased supply to meet heightened holiday demand.

Traders serve vegetable buyers at Senen Market, Jakarta. (Photo: ANTARA)

Indonesia ensures food supply during Ramadan, Eid al-Fitr

Indonesia's Cheap Food Movement (GPM) programme focuses on stabilising consumer-level prices for essential commodities like rice, cooking oil, and bird's eye chilis, offering them at prices within the government's retail price ceiling.

Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto chairs a Cabinet meeting in Jakarta on March 21, 2025. (Photo: Antara)

Indonesia rolls out people's schools initiative

Indonesia's Ministry of Social Affairs has identified over 200 potential sites for the establishment of people’s schools (Sekolah Rakyat), a programme designed to provide free, quality education to children from economically disadvantaged families.

The Revenue Department headquarters on Phahon Yothin Road in Bangkok. (Photo: Bangkokpost)

Thailand to tax influencers and online sellers

Director-General Pinsai Suraswadi expressed concern that many young earners, including e-commerce vendors, influencers, and product reviewers, have never filed income tax returns.

Thais urged to turn off lights for Earth Hour 2025

Thais urged to turn off lights for Earth Hour 2025

This year, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration has requested cooperation from many city landmarks by switching off their lights for the hour, including the Emerald Buddha Temple, the Grand Palace, the Temple of Dawn, the Giant Swing, Rama VIII Bridge and the Temple of the Golden Mount in Bangkok.