• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Erection 2029 Cumming. John Tan n RC Gang out n about

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Skip Navigation
Main navigation and Meta Navigation
To Home
Meta Main Navigation
  • OpenAll SectionsAll SectionsClose






Singapore Edition International Edition








Govt ramps up ministerial visits, aims to cover all constituencies by mid-2020




SingaporeGovt ramps up ministerial visits, aims to cover all constituencies by mid-2020
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Education Minister Ong Ye Kung speaking on the sidelines of an HDB community event on Sunday (Nov 18). (Photo: Tan Si Hui)
By Tan Si Hui
18 Nov 2018 04:43PM(Updated: 18 Nov 2018 05:34PM)
Share this content



Bookmark
SINGAPORE: Education Minister Ong Ye Kung announced on Sunday (Nov 18) that ministers will be intensifying the frequency of their community visits, from monthly to weekly.
The Government aims to cover all constituencies by mid-2020.

Speaking on the sidelines of a Housing and Development Board roadshow, Mr Ong said: “Given the current momentum, that we are doing almost every week now, in one to one-and-a-half years’ time, we aim to complete all constituencies.


“The thinking is really this - that as Political Office Holders (POHs) we spend a lot of time in our constituencies but as younger ministers and POHs, actually there is a need for us to step out of our constituencies and meet residents outside our constituency.
READ: 4G leaders take stronger hold of PAP's Central Executive Committee; senior members step aside
“Only then can we have a greater understanding of how the rest of Singapore feels.”

Advertisement

Singapore Management University law professor Eugene Tan said the ramping up of visits is “not surprising” and shows the People’s Action Party (PAP) is shifting gears and moving into election mode.
He sees the visits as the fourth-generation leaders' way of increasing engagement with residents.
During PAP’s Central Executive Committee election last Sunday, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said the PAP has only two years left to prepare for the next General Election (GE) and suggested that it could even be brought forward.
Responding to criticism that these community visits could be “for show”, Mr Ong said scepticism is part and parcel of politics and “cannot be helped”.
“Just keep on walking, keep on talking to residents, keep on letting residents feedback to you,” he said. “Try to act on it, solve the problems, keep on doing it, regardless of the criticism.”
He also said the visits have progressively become more informal and organic, instead of being staged and planned.
“Sometimes residents even have a shock, 'how come three of you (ministers) are here?' But that way I think you have a much more authentic interaction, it’s a lot more natural and what you hear is probably a more accurate reflection of how the ground works.”
READ: PAP has only two years left to prepare for next GE, says PM Lee
In 2016, Mr Ong was appointed Chairman of People’s Association Advisory Panel for ministerial community visits. He had also proposed a new format where ministers and POHs will work in teams across constituencies.
Residents that Channel NewsAsia spoke with had mixed reactions.
Some welcomed the move and saw the increased interaction as beneficial to residents.
Sembawang resident Kelvin Lee, 30, said: “Most importantly, we will have more one-to-one sessions with the ministers and be able to give feedback on how they can improve our area.”
Woodlands resident Joseph Foo, 47, said: “At least they can represent us to make decisions in future developments. By interacting with the residents, from the horses’ mouth, they will know what’s going on.”
But others have questioned the effectiveness of weekly visits and whether they can solve their problems.
Sembawang resident Xavier Ang, 30, said: “Maybe some of the smaller issues can be solved, but what’s the point of more visits if the bigger problems like transport connectivity won’t be solved.”
Chong Pang resident, 32-year-old Lee Zhen Lin, agreed: “Intensifying the visits may not make any difference especially in such a short period of time. It will probably take a minimum of two years to see the results.“
He added: “On the ground, it shows that you’re listening to us. But to see changes, it won’t be that fast.”
Source: CNA/hs(ra)
Tagged Topics
Share this content



Bookmark
More stories for you


Get the Channel NewsAsia newsletter in your inbox
SUBSCRIBE
Advertisement




More information about Channel News Asia
jump to top of page
Sections
About Us
Advertise with us
Get the news that matters in your inbox every morning!
Please enter your email address
I consent to the use of my personal data by Mediacorp and the Mediacorp group of companies (collectively "Mediacorp") to send me marketing and advertising materials in relation to goods and services of Mediacorp and its business partners and for research and analysis
SUBSCRIBE

Follow our news
Experience news with our apps
Copyright© Mediacorp 2018. Mediacorp Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.





image: https://rp.gwallet.com/r1/cm/p46

p46




Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/govt-ramps-up-ministerial-community-visits-10943528
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
1542565386038.png
MENU
Singapore

4G leaders to complete visits to all constituencies within next 18 months
By JANICE LIM
lrm_export_2196972326035_20181118_115932313.jpeg
Koh Mui Fong/TODAYAsked by reporters whether the timeline to complete visiting all constituencies is tied to the next General Election, Mr Ong Ye Kung said the 12- to 18-month target is “purely a mathematical formula”.
Published18 NOVEMBER, 2018
UPDATED 18 NOVEMBER, 2018
SINGAPORE — In a sign that the drum beat for the next General Election (GE) is getting louder, Education Minister Ong Ye Kung said on Sunday (Nov 18) that fourth-generation (4G) leaders aim to complete visits to all constituencies, including opposition-held ones, in the next 12 to 18 months.
A week ago at the biennial People’s Action Party (PAP) conference, secretary-general Lee Hsien Loong, who is also Prime Minister, had said the party has "only two years left" to prepare for the next GE.

ADVERTISING


inRead invented by Teads

But the timeline of 12 to 18 months is “purely a mathematical formula”, said Mr Ong when reporters asked if it was tied to the next election.
“Because if one year is 52 weeks and, given that we have walked 18 constituencies (this year), I think in one to one-and-a-half years’ time, we should finish all constituencies. So it’s just mathematics,” said Mr Ong, who is chairman of the People’s Association advisory panel for ministerial community visits.
ADVERTISEMENT

Speaking to the media on a visit to the MyNiceHome Roadshow at Canberra Crescent in Sembawang, Mr Ong declined to comment when asked about a TODAY report that he is out of the running to be the next prime minister. He would only say that announcements will be made.
Mr Ong was among three candidates – alongside Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing and Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat – touted as frontrunners to succeed Mr Lee.
But after he was not among the names recommended by PAP’s outgoing Central Executive Committee to be voted into the party’s highest decision-making body in the lead-up to internal elections last Sunday, cadres told TODAY he is out of the running as he is not deemed to be a core leader within the ruling party.
The younger 4G leaders have been ramping up their community visits to constituencies in recent months.
TODAY previously reported that about 10 ministerial community visits are conducted each year. Since July when a new format of multiple ministers making joint community visits kicked off, 11 have been conducted. Since September this year, the visits have been conducted almost weekly.
The latest took place on Sunday, with National Development Minister Lawrence Wong and senior parliamentary secretaries Tan Wu Meng and Amrin Amin visiting Zhenghua and Bukit Panjang.
The 29 constituencies in Singapore – 13 single-member constituencies and 16 group representation constituencies – comprise 89 wards.
“As younger ministers, actually there is a need for us to step out of our constituencies and meet residents outside our constituency. Only then can we have a greater understanding of how the rest of Singapore feels. And at the same time too, residents outside of our constituencies get to see us, get (a feel of) how we are, they get to understand us,” said Mr Ong.
“I think we are underexposed. I think we need to walk more, understand more, listen more and interact more with residents.”
Such visits have also become “more informal” and “not so staged and planned”, said Mr Ong. This allows for ministers to have a “more authentic interaction” with residents.
Asked about criticism that such visits are only for show, Mr Ong said: “Scepticism is part and parcel of politics, so I think it cannot be helped, just live with it”.
Related Stories
Ong Ye Kung out of PM race, say PAP cadres
SINGAPORE

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our email newsletter to receive updates on the latest news.
SUBSCRIBE

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TodayOnline newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.


Read Next


The Big Read: From the boondocks to waterfront town, Punggol grapples with growing pains and traffic jams
17 NOVEMBER



No grades till 15: Estonian schools encourage creativity over rote learning
18 NOVEMBER



Recent discussion over social enterprise hawker centres partly fuelled by ‘well-meaning but misinformed hearsay, anecdotes’: Amy Khor
18 NOVEMBER



More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT

Loading



Loading



Loading



Loading



Loading



Loading




Subscribe to our email newsletter.
SUBSCRIBE

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TodayOnline newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.

Connect with Us
Download Our App
  • 1542565386127.png
  • 1542565386217.png
Copyright 2018 © Mediacorp Press Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Mediacorp News Group.



activity;xsp=4378216;ord=1;num=1180897890590.1313
DFPAudiencePixel;ord=2838567756116.39;dc_seg=601950343
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
PM Lee says will lead PAP in next election, but 4G leaders will be ‘in the thick of things’
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong says he will still take the lead for the People’s Action Party at the next General Election in terms of setting the agenda, working out the policies and campaigning for the party.


h
03:43
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said he will still take the lead for the People’s Action Party at the next General Election, although the fourth-generation leaders will "very much be in the thick of things". Afifah Ariffin reports.
2
related media assets (image or videos) available. Click to see the gallery.
By Afifah Ariffin
03 Dec 2018 06:13PM
(Updated: 03 Dec 2018 10:39PM)
Share this content




Bookmark

BUENOS AIRES: Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said he will still lead the People’s Action Party (PAP) in the next General Election, although the fourth-generation (4G) leaders will “very much be in the thick of things”.

“I think taking the lead in the sense of setting the agenda, working out the policies, preparing the manifesto, making the pitch to the public, and actively campaigning during the election and organising the election,” said Mr Lee.

Speaking to reporters at the end of his five-day visit to Argentina on Saturday (Dec 1), where he attended the G20 Leaders’ Summit from Nov 30 to Dec 1, Mr Lee added that the country’s ruling party has a depth of experience going into the polls.

Mr Lee said that it is not just the experienced leaders who can lead, as the younger crop also possesses both the capability and willingness to take Singapore into the future.

“The fact that we are going into an election with a team which has depth – it’s not just the present leaders, who are in their late 50s, early 60s – but also the next generation of leaders, 40s, 50s, ready to take over,” he said.

“I think that’s a very strong message, which goes beyond any specific policies and manifesto items or promises, but the commitment is we are here to serve and not just for now, but to serve into the future and you can rely on us.”

Advertisement
READ: PAP appoints Heng Swee Keat first assistant secretary-general

READ: Political experience, likeable character put Heng Swee Keat in good stead to be PM, analysts say

In November, the PAP appointed a new slate of office bearers in its Central Executive Committee, with the so-called 4G leaders making up the bulk of the new team. Singapore’s general election must be held by April 2021.

Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat became the party’s first assistant secretary-general, paving the way for him to be the future leader of the party. Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing was appointed the second assistant secretary-general.

PRIORITY IS TO WIN ELECTION: PM LEE

When asked about the plans for Mr Heng, Mr Lee said the priority is to win the election first.

“After that, if all goes according to plan, well, the succession happens within the PAP,” he said.

“There are no surprises. I very much hope we will work out that way. It's a mechanism which has worked well for Singapore. It has provided stability, continuity as well as renewal and updating of persons - individuals, leadership as well as content for our policies. But it depends on the party staying together and the party winning elections.”

Asked when the next Cabinet reshuffle will take place, Mr Lee only said that he will do so “in due course”, adding that a reasonable time would be after next year’s Budget. The Budget speech is typically delivered by the finance minister in February or March.

READ: Heng Swee Keat and Chan Chun Sing 'make a strong pairing', says PM Lee

READ: A leadership team with complementary strengths: Goh Chok Tong on Heng Swee Keat and Chan Chun Sing

Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat, who was also in Buenos Aires with Mr Lee, told reporters that the younger ministers will meet in January to discuss long-term issues that Singapore needs to address.

Following the discussions, the team will then consult Singaporeans on the topics that will shape the country’s future.

“We want to build on the Our Singapore Conversation. But at the same time, we want to have some time to look at what are some fundamental, long-term issues that as a country, we need to address, as a society, we need to address,” said Mr Heng.
Source: CNA/ic(cy)
Tagged Topics
PAP

Lee Hsien Loong

4G leaders
Heng Swee Keat
Share this content




Bookmark

More stories for you
Financial resilience key as greater uncertainty looms: Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat Toggle share menu
Heng Swee Keat and Chan Chun Sing 'make a strong pairing': PM Lee Toggle share menu
A leadership team with complementary strengths: Goh Chok Tong on Heng Swee Keat and Chan Chun Sing Toggle share menu
image: https://images.outbrainimg.com/tran...AsImgiOjIwMCwiZCI6MS41LCJjcyI6MCwiZiI6MH0.jpg
Private hospitalisation may not be as costly as you think. Find out why.
Private hospitalisation may not be as costly as you think. Find out why.
image: https://images.outbrainimg.com/tran...AsImgiOjIwMCwiZCI6MS41LCJjcyI6MCwiZiI6MH0.jpg
Experts Ranked The Best US Presidents. Guess Who No. 1 Is
Experts Ranked The Best US Presidents. Guess Who No. 1 Is
Gloriousa
Recommended by

Get the Channel NewsAsia newsletter in your inbox


Enter your email address
SUBSCRIBE
Advertisement
More information about Channel News Asia
jump to top of page
Sections
Singapore
Asia
World
Business
Sport
Technology
Health
Commentary
Podcasts
Video
About Us
About Channel NewsAsia
Hotel Partners
Events & Seminars
Presenters & Correspondents
Contact Us
Advertise with us
Contact Sales
Online Advertising
TV Advertising
Get the news that matters in your inbox every morning!
Please enter your email address
Enter your email address

I consent to the use of my personal data by Mediacorp and the Mediacorp group of companies (collectively "Mediacorp") to send me marketing and advertising materials in relation to goods and services of Mediacorp and its business partners and for research and analysis
SUBSCRIBE
Follow our news
Experience news with our apps
Play Store
App Store
Copyright© Mediacorp 2018. Mediacorp Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.

Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy
image: https://rp.gwallet.com/r1/cm/p46


Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...lead-pap-in-next-election-4g-leaders-10992420
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Skip Navigation
Main navigation and Meta Navigation
To Home
Meta Main Navigation
  • OpenAll SectionsAll SectionsClose
SINGAPORESDP launches election campaign, aims to contest same constituencies as in GE2015
Toggle share menu



Jump to top


Singapore Edition International Edition








SDP launches election campaign, aims to contest same constituencies as in GE2015




SingaporeSDP launches election campaign, aims to contest same constituencies as in GE2015
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
SDP’s Secretary General Chee Soon Juan gives a speech at the event. (Photo: Matthew Mohan)
By Matthew Mohan
23 Feb 2019 08:24PM(Updated: 23 Feb 2019 08:36PM)
Share this content



Bookmark
SINGAPORE: The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) will contest the same constituencies as it did in the last general election, said secretary-general Chee Soon Juan as he launched the party’s election campaign on Saturday (Feb 23).
"In terms of the constituencies that we are looking at, it's no different from the ones we contested in 2015 - subject of course to the redrawing of the boundaries which we won't know until closer to the election," Dr Chee told reporters at a Mandarin Orchard ballroom.

"But as it stands right now, it will be those same few constituencies that we contested in 2015."
SDP had fielded 11 candidates in the 2015 General Election but failed to gain a seat. The party contested three Single Member Constituencies – Bukit Batok, Bukit Panjang and Yuhua - and two Group Representation Constituencies – Holland-Bukit Timah and Marsiling-Yew Tee.
The next general election must be held by April 2021.
The SDP’s new campaign slogan is “#SDPNOW, The Way Forward”, which Dr Chee said was based on the party’s "vision" and "alternative policies" for the future.

Advertisement

He added that the SDP has stuck to its beliefs and values.
"We're still continuing to fight the same things, because the PAP (People’s Action Party) refuses to change," he said.
"And in the interim, what they have done is that they have hit us, thrown the kitchen sink at us, but we've stuck to our message, we've never wavered in our belief that rights come before riches, people before profit, wisdom before wealth."

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
SDP members pose for a photo during the party's election campaign launch. (Photo: Matthew Mohan)

He also explained why the SDP is kickstarting its campaign early.
"The fight, the contest, is won or lost way before those nine days (of campaigning). So for us, it's making sure we start early, we get people who are new here, coming to this event early enough ... Call us kiasu, I don't know, but it's important for us because we don't know when elections are going to be held. By the time it's held, it's going to be too late,” Dr Chee said.
Several SDP members took to the stage at the launch, including chairman Paul Tambyah and vice chairman John Tan.
Dr Tambyah talked about the “relentless rise in the cost of living”, as well as a “series of leaks and tragedies” that he said have caused people to question whether the PAP is up to the task of leading Singapore.
“I don’t think mistakes are going to go away,” he added. “I know they will happen, that malicious individuals will commit crimes that hurt many people and accidents also will happen, but what I’m concerned about is that nobody takes responsibility, or ownership of these disasters."
A “CONSOLIDATED” OPPOSITION NEEDED: DR CHEE
In his speech, Dr Chee touched on the importance of having a “consolidated” opposition effort in local politics.
The SDP was among seven opposition parties which came together last year to explore the possibility of working closer together at the next general election.
Present at that meeting was political veteran Tan Cheng Bock, who recently filed an application to form a new political partycalled Progress Singapore Party.
“The first step is to get everybody to sit at the same table and ask the question - what are we trying to achieve?” Dr Chee said on Saturday. “I want to encourage our opposition friends to think of what we are fighting for and work towards that end where we have that common value, that goal we want to achieve.”

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
SDP chairman Paul Tambyah addresses the audience during his party’s campaign launch on Feb 23, 2019. (Photo: Matthew Mohan)

Mr Benjamin Pwee, who recently applied to join SDP after his resignation from the Democratic Progressive Party, was at the campaign launch.
“The launch was very good because it features public policy which is at the very heart and it is very much beliefs and values based rather than personality based,” Mr Pwee told Channel NewsAsia. “There are very few political parties who have the wherewithal to actually come up with good solid policy formulations.”
READ: Benjamin Pwee quits DPP for 'bigger' party with 'recognisable and credible senior leader

The SDP’s Central Executive Committee will meet in early March to consider the application of Mr Pwee, who contested in Bishan-Toa Payoh in the last two general elections.
According to SDP vice chairman John Tan, the party will progressively roll out a series of revised policies in the months to come, with their cost of living policy and housing policy to be unveiled in March.
The party is also planning to hold a pre-election rally at Hong Lim Park in September.
Source: CNA/gs
Tagged Topics
Share this content



Bookmark
More stories for you


Get the Channel NewsAsianewsletter in your inbox
SUBSCRIBE
Advertisement




More information about Channel News Asia
jump to top of page
Sections
About Us
Advertise with us
Get the news that matters in your inbox every morning!
Please enter your email address
I consent to the use of my personal data by Mediacorp and the Mediacorp group of companies (collectively "Mediacorp") to send me marketing and advertising materials in relation to goods and services of Mediacorp and its business partners and for research and analysis
SUBSCRIBE

Follow our news
Experience news with our apps
Copyright© Mediacorp 2019. Mediacorp Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.




image: https://secure-sg.imrworldwide.com/...ttps://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore

m

image: https://rp.gwallet.com/r1/cm/p46

p46






Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...aign-general-election-constituencies-11282880
 

Confuseous

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Summary - the porlampar GrassLooters have not been doing their job.
Just strutting around looking important. Have seen them around...
reserving parking lots for the MPs and Ministers, knocking on doors
ahead of the MPs and "whispering" minister/MP coming.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
More good news from the PAP,,,erection really cumming

What a BS policy,,,,the age cap was put in place because ah sohs should not have kids,,,so if a 70 yo ah so want IVF,,,can ah? PAP dishing out crap but its good election news,,,

Singapore to remove age limit for IVF treatments, introduce new subsidies
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
File photo of in-vitro fertilisation, in which eggs were harvested from a woman's ovaries, fertilised, and then cryogenically preserved. (Photo: AFP)
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
By Jalelah Abu Baker
@JalelahCNA
28 Aug 2019 03:08PM (Updated: 28 Aug 2019 03:33PM)
Share this content



Bookmark
SINGAPORE: Singapore will remove its age limit for women undergoing in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatments, as part of a range of measures it announced on Wednesday (Aug 28) to support marriage and parenthood.
Singapore currently imposes an age limit of 45 years old for women undergoing assisted reproduction technology (ART) procedures, which include IVF treatments. This age limit will be removed from Jan 1, 2020.

Advertisement


A cap on the number of IVF cycles a woman can undergo – currently set at 10 cycles for women aged 40 and below, and five for women above 40 – will also be removed.
READ: Additional subsidies for pre-schools to increase from January 2020
READ: All childhood vaccinations to be subsidised at polyclinics and CHAS GPs by end of 2020
CO-FUNDING OF ART PROCEDURES

Advertisement

Government co-funding for ART procedures will also be enhanced.
Today, co-funding for up to six ART cycles is only available for women aged below 40 at the start of the ART cycle. From 2020, up to two of the six co-funded ART cycles can be carried out at age 40 or later, as long as the couple had attempted assisted reproduction or intra-uterine insemination (IUI) procedures before age 40.
Women also have to be assessed by their doctor to be fit to carry a pregnancy to term, MOH said.
READ: Remove IVF age limit, reduce pre-school costs for young families: PAP Women’s Wing

Currently, Singaporean couples can receive co-funding of up to S$7,700 per fresh cycle and S$2,200 per frozen cycle, for three fresh cycles and three frozen cycles.
If one spouse is a permanent resident, the co-funding is up to S$5,700 per fresh cycle and S$1,600 per frozen cycle. If one spouse is a foreigner, co-funding is up to S$3,600 per fresh cycle and up to S$1,000 per frozen cycle.
READ: Why Singaporean women are going to Johor to make babies

WATCH: Talking Point on why women are going overseas for fertility treatment

NEW SUBSIDIES FOR IUI PROCEDURES
Couples going through the less invasive IUI procedure at public assisted reproduction centres – the Singapore General Hospital, KK Women's and Children's Hospital and National University Hospital – will receive new subsidies from 2020.
Singaporean couples will receive co-funding of up to 75 per cent, capped at S$1,000 per treatment cycle, for three cycles of IUI. If one spouse is a permanent resident, the co-funding is up to S$700, and if one spouse is a foreigner, the co-funding is up to S$500.
READ: ‘Doing it for myself’: The women freezing their eggs to raise their chances of conceiving
To be eligible for the IUI co-funding, women must be below 40 years old at the start of the cycle, the couple must have been assessed by a doctor at the public assisted reproduction centre to be suitable for the treatment, and one spouse must be a Singapore citizen.
Despite the better support for older women to conceive, MOH cautioned that the probability of pregnancy complications increases with maternal age, and the success rate for ART carried out beyond age 40 remains low.
"We continue to encourage couples to marry and start their families early," the ministry said.
Source: CNA/ad(cy)
Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...t-subsidies-iui-fertility-treatments-11848862
 
Top