TEHRAN – The Iranian Red Crescent Society will establish medical centers in Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan in the near future.
New medical centers will soon be launched in Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan, which will play a significant role in promoting the country's health diplomacy, IRNA quoted IRCS official, Peyman Namdar, as saying.
By setting up medical centers in Central Asia, the Iranian Red Crescent Society develops its humanitarian activities, he added.
The Iranian Red Crescent Society manages several hospitals, polyclinics, as well as hemodialysis and rehabilitation centers in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, he highlighted.
The centers are self-governed and their humanitarian activities are funded by receiving the costs of medical services from patients and collecting aid from philanthropists, he noted.
Health diplomacy
Health Minister Bahram Einollahi has said health diplomacy is one of the areas that are able to deepen relations between countries in the region.
There are many common issues for cooperation in the field of health between countries, he said, adding that the government's strategy is to strengthen foreign policy, especially with neighboring countries, IRNA reported.
Einollahi said in April that many countries in the region are asking Iran for help with issues related to health.
In May, Iran hosted the 26th G5 High-Level Experts Meeting on Health Cooperation and the 1st Healthcare Leadership and Governance Training Program.
G5 countries (Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, plus the World Health Organization) have taken part in the meeting with the theme of “Joint Work for Solving Joint Health Problems.”
Addressing the opening ceremony, Einollahi referred to the unity and cooperation of the countries in the fields of health, treatment, and medical education as a historical necessity.
Achieving, maintaining, and promoting health is never possible in a regional way and does not happen in an isolated region, but requires the cooperation of countries, especially neighboring countries, he stressed.
“To develop health in the countries of the group of five, we must look at health collectively and think about creating and promoting health in all countries.
Iran initiated the establishment of the G5 in 2005 to promote subregional cooperation in health to provide technical support in improving this collaboration.
In June 2021, Ahmed al-Mandhari, the World Health Organization director for Eastern Mediterranean Region, said the Islamic Republic of Iran is a role model for primary health care.
For the past four decades, its PHC network has aimed to ensure that people have timely access to affordable, accessible, and acceptable essential health services, he explained.
In October 2021, World Health Organization (WHO) representative to Iran Jaffar Hussain, said that Iran's health system can be a model for other countries in the region, especially in the field of health and the use of valuable forces such as healthcare providers.
The national budget bill for the current Iranian calendar year 1402, which started on March 21, has increased the health sector’s budget by 29 percent compared to the current year’s budget.
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