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PAP government spreading propaganda through sec school Social Studies textbook

micromachine

Lieutenant General
Loyal
This is what is being taught by the secondary 3 social studies textbook all over Singapore. My kid is learning PAP propaganda that the Medifund and Medisave implemented by the PAP government is a very good system that help Singaporeans pay for their healthcare bills. Is it necessary for my kids to learn 'how well' the PAP government is treating Singaporeans?


I believe this is propaganda at work. Obviously from my tone, you guys will know that I am not a big fan of the People's Action Party.


How can the government deceive students at such a young age into believing that they are so noble and kind?


Full article at PAP government spreading propaganda through sec school Social Studies textbook
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Why does a social studies textbook need to promulgate Medifund and various other medical schemes from the PAP govt? Stick to the core essentials: Sang Nila Utama, Sir Stamford Raffles, Japanese Occupation, Hock Lee Bus riots, Operation Coldstore, getting kicked out of Malaysia etc.

Propaganda is most effective on impressionable kids, I'm sure the MOE knows this very well. :wink:
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
shouldnt that be taught under economics or principal of accounts or something?surely they have to breakdown the cost analysis and comparison with other countries all that to determine its usefulness.
 

ginfreely

Alfrescian
Loyal
Want to teach in textbook must include under what circumstances then the parents qualified for the 100k medifund for her leukemia treatment. It is a lie if the requirements are so rigid that most people do not qualify most of the time.
 

xingguy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
This is what is being taught by the secondary 3 social studies textbook all over Singapore. My kid is learning PAP propaganda that the Medifund and Medisave implemented by the PAP government is a very good system that help Singaporeans pay for their healthcare bills. Is it necessary for my kids to learn 'how well' the PAP government is treating Singaporeans?


I believe this is propaganda at work. Obviously from my tone, you guys will know that I am not a big fan of the People's Action Party.


How can the government deceive students at such a young age into believing that they are so noble and kind?


Full article at PAP government spreading propaganda through sec school Social Studies textbook

A lie told often enough becomes the truth. The same goes for half truth.
What better time to brainwash then when they are young.

1016942_614864435213214_568734274_n.jpg



In Hong Kong thousands took to the streets to protest the introduction of Chinese national education in the schools.
 

Papsmearer

Alfrescian (InfP) - Comp
Generous Asset
If they want to teach this, then they must also teach how CPF works, where the money is invested. Also, how the HDB works, that the flats are a lease, etc. But of course, its the PAP. The teachers and MOE are all fucking cowards for keeping quiet and taking money to indoctrinate out youth with this shit.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
This is what is being taught by the secondary 3 social studies textbook all over Singapore. My kid is learning PAP propaganda that the Medifund and Medisave implemented by the PAP government is a very good system that help Singaporeans pay for their healthcare bills.

It is not propaganda because it is the truth.

Singapore's medical care system has earned praise throughout the world as a model of efficiency and sustainability.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Singapore Beats Hong Kong in Health Efficiency: Southeast Asia

By Sharon Chen and Sterling Wong Sep 18, 2014 4:01 PM GMT+1200


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</figure><section class="related_links" role="complementary" style="box-sizing: border-box; border-top-width: 0px; bottom: 0px; clear: right; position: relative; width: 281px; border-left-width: 4px; border-left-style: solid; border-left-color: rgb(221, 221, 221); float: right; padding: 0px 0px 0px 18px; margin: 0px 0px 0px 30px;">Related


</section>Singapore overtook Hong Kong to top a ranking of the most-efficient health-care systems, as the government boosts spending on medical services to support an aging population.

The Southeast Asian nation was rated first among 51 countries, according to an annual ranking compiled by Bloomberg that tracks factors including life expectancy, the cost of health care as a percentage of gross domestic product and total medical expenditure for each person. Hong Kong dropped to second place and Italy was ranked third, while the U.S. was 44th and Russia last.

Singapore has increased health-care spending in recent years as the workforce ages and the government faces political pressure to ease the burden of the country’s poor. The city-state subsidizes some medical expenses and patients are required to take on more of the costs if they choose premium services, with citizens using mandatory savings set aside for health-care needs.

“I describe Singapore’s system as the least imperfect in the world,” said Jeremy Lim, head of Oliver Wyman & Co.’s Asia-Pacific health and life sciences practice. “If Singapore can successfully balance the increased funding availability with prudent measures to curb inappropriate and over-consumption which society as a whole accepts and supports, the future would be very promising.”

Health-Care Spending

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s administration will spend close to S$4 billion ($3.2 billion) over the next five years to help Singaporeans benefit from a new universal health insurance plan called MediShield Life to be implemented at the end of next year, according to the Ministry of Health. It has also set aside S$9 billion for health care and other benefits for the elderly as part of a Pioneer Generation Package.

Bloomberg’s ranking of the most-efficient health-care systems is based on countries with a population of at least 5 million, GDP per capita exceeding $5,000 and a minimum 70-year life expectancy. This year’s ranking took into account year-on-year changes to the criteria used.

Hong Kong’s health-care cost per capita increased 38 percent from a year earlier to $1,944, while Singapore’s rose 13 percent to $2,426, according to the ranking. Singapore’s life expectancy gained 0.4 years in the same period to 82.1 years, compared with Hong Kong’s 0.06 years rise to 83.5 years.

“The higher health expenditure is a result of the increase in both government spending as well as expenses of the private sector,” a representative for Hong Kong’s Secretary for Food and Health Ko Wing-man wrote in an e-mail. Singapore’s Ministry of Health declined to comment on the ranking.

Targeted Spending

Singapore’s consumer prices rose 1.2 percent in July from a year earlier, the slowest pace since March, while Hong Kong’s inflation quickened to 4 percent from 3.6 percent in June.

Hong Kong has higher utilization rates and public medical expenditure, while Singapore’s health-care spending is more targeted, said Phua Kai Hong, an associate professor of health policy and management at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore, citing preliminary findings from his comparative studies.

A photograph of patients housed in a tent outside Singapore’s Changi General Hospital in the Straits Times newspaper in January prompted concern that the nation’s hospitals may not be able to accommodate the aging population.

The number of elderly in Singapore, or those older than 65 years, will triple to 900,000 by 2030, according to the National Population and Talent Division. Based on the current birth rate and without opening its workforce to more foreigners, the median age in the city-state will rise to 47 years by 2030 from 39 in 2011, it said.

Chronic Illnesses

The average length of stay in hospitals for patients aged 65 years and above rose to 8.2 days in 2013 from 7.8 days in 2010, according to the Ministry of Health. About 1,200 beds will be added to the health-care sector this year, with 10,000 more by the end of 2020, according to the ministry.

In addition to eight public hospitals, private options on the island include IHH Healthcare Bhd.’s Mount Elizabeth and Raffles Medical Group Ltd.’s center.

“As the population of older people with chronic illnesses and disabilities and home requirements increases,” beds would get filled with more people who have difficulty getting out of the hospital, said David Matchar, director of health services and systems research at Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School in Singapore. “It only means that the bed crunch would get worse.”

Singapore topped a separate 2012 Bloomberg Ranking of the world’s healthiest countries, compared with Hong Kong at 17th and the U.S. at 33rd out of 145 countries. Singapore’s Health Promotion Board hosts free exercise programs in the central business district and schools run a program to help overweight and underweight children achieve an ideal weight.

“In terms of Singapore being very high in terms of rankings, I think largely it is attributable to preventative care,” said Tilak Abeysinghe, an associate professor of economics at National University of Singapore. “The government takes a very, very active role of telling people to live healthily.”

 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Thanks to the PAP, Singapore is the world's healthiest nation.
 

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Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
METHODOLOGY: To identify the healthiest countries in the world, Bloomberg Rankings created health scores and health-risk scores for countries with populationsof at least one million. We subtracted the risk score from the health score to determine the country's rank. Five-year averages, when available, were used to mitigate some of the short-term year-over-year swings.

Total health-score factors:

o Life expectancy at birth and infant mortality (10% of score)
o Causes of death: Communicative and non-communicative diseases, excluding war-related injuries (40% of score)
o Death rates by three age groups: less than 14, 15-64 and 65 and up (40% of score)
o Survival to 65 and life expectancy at 65, both gender-ratio weighted (10% of score)
Risk-score factors:
o % of population age 15+ who smoke any form of tobacco, including cigarettes, cigars and pipes, and excluding smokeless tobacco
o Total (reported and estimated) adult (15+ years) per-capita consumption of alcohol
o % population ages 20+ overweight (Body Mass Index ≥ 25) and/or obese (BMI ≥ 30)
o % of population physically inactive (less than 30 minutes of moderate activity five times per week, or 20 minutes of vigorous activity three times per week)
o % population with raised total cholesterol (≥ 6.2 millimoles per liter)
o % population with raised blood pressure (systolic blood pressure≥140 or diastolic blood pressure≥90)
o % population with raised fasting blood glucose (≥ 7.0 mmol/L) or on medication for high glucose
o % population ages 15-49 infected with HIV
o Composite ranking of outdoor and indoor pollution, water safety and access to sanitation
o Composite ranking of immunized coverage for DTP, measles, hepatitis B, meningitis, tuberculosis & polio among 1-year-olds
o % of underweight children aged <5 years
o Lifetime risk of maternal death (the probability that a 15-year-old female will die eventually from a maternal cause)
Total risk penalty is the average risk score of all factors plus an adjustment factor, which takes income into consideration. Using World Bank guidelines, countries were divided into three income groups with specific health risks. For countries with gross national income per capita of more than $12,276, smoking, obesity/overweight, cholesterol level and blood pressure were overweighted. For countries with incomes of $1,006 to $12,275, high blood pressure, smoking, alcohol consumption and environmental factors were overweighted. And countries whose residents earn less than $1,005 were overweighted in prevalence of HIV, environmental factors, childhood underweight and maternal health. Adjustments were also made for countries that ranked worst in a risk factor that was outside of their income-group specific risks. Countries with data for less than eight risk factors were excluded. Where only aggregate health statistics on China were provided, we extrapolated Hong Kong-specific data from the HK SAR's Department of Health and the Census and Statistics Department, and adjusted mainland-only China accordingly.
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
leong sam give up ur NZ citizenship and come back,we will take care of ur dieing corpse till the last breath,till death do us part.
 

Tuayapeh

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
It is not propaganda because it is the truth.

Singapore's medical care system has earned praise throughout the world as a model of efficiency and sustainability.

Wheres the proof of your assertions (bullshit)?

Praise my lampar understand?
 

Poomer

Alfrescian
Loyal
Why does a social studies textbook need to promulgate Medifund and various other medical schemes from the PAP govt? Stick to the core essentials: Sang Nila Utama, Sir Stamford Raffles, Japanese Occupation, Hock Lee Bus riots, Operation Coldstore, getting kicked out of Malaysia etc.

Propaganda is most effective on impressionable kids, I'm sure the MOE knows this very well. :wink:

You do realise the last 3 are shady events, where no one really knows the whole story. Chances are they are propaganda as it is.
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Now you know why sinkie are so draft.. The sinkie mind drafting starts young.. Do you still wanna have kids in sinkieland?
 

Papsmearer

Alfrescian (InfP) - Comp
Generous Asset
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. The stats don't lie. Singaporeans are the healthiest bunch on earth.

Sam, you are such a fucking retard. Do you know why sinkies are the healthiest bunch in the world? Because for half of them, if they don't pass their IPPT during reservist cycles, they will get fined or punished some other way. They have no choice. They are forced to keep fit. If those countries that you listed above forced their citizens and fined them the same way as singapore does, they will be just as fit.
 
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