What is Wellness Pilipinas?

The Philippines' response to the call of World Health Organization (WHO) in 2009
to lessen the augment of Lifestyle Diseases of stroke, cancer, diabetes, etc, and the country's compliance to United Nations Climate Change Peace Building Campaign in 2007. Wellness Pilipinas! was conceived by "Wellness for Peace" Author, Public Speaker & former Peace Ambassador Zara Jane Juan. It consists of pep talks, workshops, symposiums & fora meant to achieve wellness in mind, body, spirit & economics as tools for peace & nation-building. Wellness Pilipinas aired as a live TV show at GNN via G-SAT Asia from 2009-2010 supported by private and public corporations

Innovating Peace by Amb Zara Jane Juan

Innovating Peace by Amb Zara Jane Juan
Wellness for Peace Education

WELLNESS PILIPINAS INTERNATIONAL

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Friday, July 24, 2020

WHO Manifesto for a healthy recovery from COVID-19

Actionables to the prescriptions of the WHO IManifesto
23 July 2020

These “actionables” are practical steps for implementing the prescriptions of the WHO Manifesto for a healthy recovery from COVID-19. They aim at creating a healthier, fairer and greener world while investing to maintain and resuscitating the economy hit by the effects of COVID-19.

Policy makers, national and local decision-makers and a wide array of other actors wishing to contribute to a healthy recovery can now take decisive steps by shaping the way we live, work and consume. Effects on environmental degradation and pollution and climate change will be wide ranging. WHO and partner organizations have since long been developing substantive guidance and provide support for building healthier environments for healthier populations. 

A comprehensive set of key actionables for achieving a healthier environments is provided accordingly. Their prioritization will depend upon the local context and situation. New investments and reconsideration of priorities in the context of recovery from COVID-19 present unique opportunities for shaping healthier environments and scaling up actions accordingly.

Actionables for a healthy, green recovery

1) Protect and preserve the source of human health: Nature.

Biological Diversity

  • Implement and update National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs) in line with the 2011-2020 Strategic Plan for Biodiversity and the 20 Aichi Biodiversity Targets.
  • Incorporate biodiversity values, ecosystem protection and the ‘value of nature’ into national and regional policies, strategies and programmes, including in public health policies and in national accounting and reporting systems.
  • Eliminate or reform incentives, including subsidies that are harmful to biodiversity, including those that promote monoculture production systems.
  • Avoid ecosystem loss and degradation and promote ecosystem integrity and resilience and protection of species.Limit or control human-wildlife contact to reduce the risk of infectious diseases, including zoonotic and vector-borne diseases.
  • Promote agrobiodiversity and the use of integrated pest management to reduce the need for chemical pesticides and herbicides.

Climate Change

  • Mitigate climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and other climate changing pollutants like black carbon for example through better energy-use choices, agricultural practices, transport, food, city compactness and industrial technology use and practices.
  • Implement sustainable infrastructure development and spatial planning to avoid locking societies into greenhouse gas-intensive emission pathways that may be difficult or very costly to change.
  • Establish and enforce air quality standards, in line with WHO’s Air Quality Guidelines.
  • Adopt very low energy building codes for new buildings and retrofit established buildings.
  • Improve the efficiency of material use, recycling and re-use of materials and products and increase overall reduction in product demand.
  • Provide climate resilient health and sustainable infrastructure, technologies and services. These may include water and sanitation services, energy supply and waste management technologies.
  • Reduce deforestation and implement afforestation and sustainable forest management.
  • Ensure and promote enabling environments for behaviour change related to choices of energy use, transport, living, and food, waste generation and general consumption.

Sanitation

 Air Pollution

  • Develop coherent multi-sectoral policies and actions across transport, industry, power generation, waste and wastewater management, agriculture, housing and land use sectors for preventing air pollution. Also develop and implement policies to ensure clean fuels and technologies for cooking, heating and lighting in households.

Chemicals

  • Implement the WHO Chemicals Road Map to enhance health sector engagement in the sound management of chemicals.
  • Implement the chemicals and waste-related multilateral environmental agreements, particularly their health protective aspects, e.g.:  
  • Implement the International Health Regulations (2005), a legally binding agreement providing a framework to better  prevent,  prepare  for  and  respond  to  public  health  events  and  emergencies  of  potential international  concern,  including  chemical events.

2) Invest in essential services, from water and sanitation to clean energy in healthcare facilities.

Water

  • Provide and promote the use of safe drinking water in communities, schools, health care facilities, workplaces and public places.
  • Ensure implementation of drinking-water quality regulations and standards.
  • Protect drinking-water supplies using Water Safety Plans (WSPs).
  • Include safe and sustainable drinking water, sanitation and hygiene in relevant health policies, strategies and programmes.

Sanitation

Hygiene

  • Promote and support the installation of handwashing facilities in homes and institutions such as schools, workplaces and health care facilities.
  • Enforce handwashing facilities in public places, food establishments and markets, and include them in routine inspection and monitoring schemes.
  • Make soap and water available to households, institutions and public places. Handwashing facilities with soap and water should be available close to (usually within 5 m) sanitation facilities.
  • Promote washing hands with soap at critical times, such as after defecation, after child cleaning  and before preparing food.

Clean energy

Healthy, safe and resilient workplaces for all

Additional actions specific to health care facilities

3) Ensure a quick healthy energy transition.

4) Promote healthy, sustainable food systems.

  • Develop or update national food-based dietary guidelines through the full integration of environmental sustainability elements in each of the guideline’s recommendations, according to national contexts.
  • Strengthen local food production and processing, especially by smallholder and family farmers, where appropriate.
  • Promote diets which are based on a variety of unprocessed or minimally processed foods, include wholegrains, legumes, nuts and an abundance and variety of fruits and vegetables and which can include moderate amounts of eggs, dairy, poultry and fish, and small amounts of red meat.
  • Promote the diversification of crops including underutilized traditional crops, applying sustainable food production and natural resource management practices.
  • Consider use of trade policy, including instruments such as tariffs and quotas, to improve sustainable food supply.
  • Implement policies and actions to create healthy, safe and sustainable food environments (such as strengthening of food control systems, restricting marketing of foods contributing to unhealthy unsustainable diets, nutrition labelling policies, fiscal policies, public food procurement policies, reformulation to gradually reduce saturated fat, sugars and salt/sodium and trans-fat from foods and beverages).
  • Improve storage, preservation, transport, and distribution technologies and infrastructure to reduce seasonal food insecurity, food and nutrient loss and waste.
  • Preserve fish habitats and promote sustainable fisheries.

5) Build healthy, liveable cities.

City design

  • Integrate health into urban planning policies to deliver highly connected, mixed-use and compact neighbourhoods that are economically and socially viable and that promote active living, sustainable mobility, energy efficiency, healthy diets and access to essential services.
  • Prioritize active and sustainable mobility as preferred mode of travel in relevant transport, spatial and urban planning policies.
  • Improve walking and cycling infrastructure for people of all ages and abilities and create citywide access to safer walking, biking, nature, public spaces and public transport to support mobility, physical activity, recreation, access to services and social interactions, and to reduce the use of energy and resources.
  • Improve access to good-quality public and green open spaces for people of all ages and abilities including accessible and safe play areas and recreational spaces for children and young people.
  • Plan places that are more resilient to climate change and natural disasters.

Social inclusiveness and cohesion

  • Create more socially inclusive places and spaces through a variety in spatial planning, such as in land parcel size, forms of land tenure, and size of housing.
  • Develop a common vision for social cohesion and health equity by adopting a people-centred “right to health” framework that includes the right to access, use and transform urban environments.

Clean air

  • Ensure cleaner air through implementing interventions in polluting sectors, such as in transport and industry, and through access to cleaner fuels and technologies for cooking, heating and lighting, adequate housing equipment and infrastructure development.

Access to adequate water, sanitation, hygiene, waste management and food

Housing

  • Ensure access to affordable housing that is not crowded, where indoor temperatures and thermal insulation are adequate, that is equipped with safety devices, and where disease vectors are controlled.

6) Stop using taxpayers money to fund pollution.

  • Stop subsidies on fossil fuels, such as for power generation and transport.
  • Subsidize or exempt tax of clean energy and fuels such as solar-, hydro- and wind-based electricity.
  • Embed environmental and health benchmarks in the financial recovery packages to COVID-19, e.g. by including ‘do no harm’ principles in the financial taxonomy of recovery packages and by actively investing in low-carbon and job-intensive sectors, including the health sector.

Cross-cutting actions

  • Strengthen and support implementation of the Health in All Policies approach at the national and subnational level.
  • Mainstream health and wellbeing, throughout all public service planning with, specific consideration to people in vulnerable situations such as migrants, refugees, internally displaced people, people in informal settlements etc.
  • Support the effective engagement and direct participation of communities in planning and policy development.
  • Conduct health, economic and environmental impact assessments of future and existing policies and interventions.
  • Collaborate across sectors for managing environmental determinants of health.
  • Allocate resources across sectors to account for the expected health impacts of sector-based policies. Use fiscal and financial mechanisms to influence environmental determinants of health through investments in adequate housing, energy efficiency, cycling and pedestrian networks, and mass transit, as well as taxation of unhealthy products and practices.
  • Monitor and track risks to health and wellbeing of different population groups; monitor the adoption and health impacts of policies and investments using timely data and targeted indicators; disaggregate by income, gender, age, race, ethnicity, migratory status, geographic location and other characteristics relevant in national contexts.

Learn More

WHO Manifesto for a healthy recovery from COVID-19

Webinar: A Healthy Recovery - Charting the Path Forward

Want to read more?

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Global research on coronavirus disease (COVID-19) -WHO



FYI: WHO is gathering the latest scientific findings and knowledge on coronavirus disease (COVID-2019) and compiling it in a database. We update the database daily from searches of bibliographic databases, hand searches of the table of contents of relevant journals, and the addition of other relevant scientific articles that come to our attention. The entries in the database may not be exhaustive and new research will be added regularly.











Database of publications on coronavirus disease (COVID-19)

You can search the WHO database of publications on coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Articles are searchable by author, key word (title, author, journal), journal, or by general topic. The database automatically displays the most recent articles. To see all articles in the database, select “Show all.” The database is updated daily, Monday through Friday.



Other resources on coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
BMJ
Cambridge University Press
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Cochrane
Elsevier
JAMA Network
The Lancet
New England Journal of Medicine
Oxford University Press
PLOS
Springer Nature
SSRN (Preprints)
Wiley




Disclaimer: The provision of a link from the WHO website to other sites does not indicate endorsement of those sites by WHO, and WHO accepts no responsibility for the validity or accuracy of their content.

Why is it recommended to avoid close contact with anyone who has fever a...

WHO: Emerging respiratory viruses, including nCoV: methods for detection, prevention, response and control

FYI: This course provides a general introduction to nCoV and emerging respiratory viruses and is intended for public health professionals, incident managers and personnel working for the United Nations, international organizations and NGOs.
Self-paced
Language: English
Enroll me for this course

Course information


La version française de ce cours est disponible sur : https://openwho.org/courses/introduction-au-ncov

A Simplified Chinese version of the course is available here: https://openwho.org/courses/introduction-to-ncov-ZH

La versión en español de este curso está disponible aquí : https://openwho.org/courses/introduccion-al-ncov

Overview: This course provides a general introduction to emerging respiratory viruses, including novel corona viruses. By the end of this course, you should be able to describe:

The nature of emerging respiratory viruses, how to detect and assess an outbreak, strategies for preventing and controlling outbreaks due to novel respiratory viruses;

What strategies should be used to communicate risk and engage communities to detect, prevent and respond to the emergence of a novel respiratory virus.

There are resources attached to each module to help you dive further into this topic.

Learning objective: Describe the fundamental principles of emerging respiratory viruses and how to effectively respond to an outbreak.

Course duration: Approximately 3 hours.

Certificates: No certificate available at this time.

Attention:
WHO teams are working on additional modules which will be uploaded in the coming days. You will be notified when new modules and videos are uploaded. Currently, the materials are offered as slide decks.

The course will offer a certificate in the future, after all of the modules have been published and a quiz has been added to each module.

The course materials are currently being translated into other languages.
Course contents

Emerging respiratory viruses, including nCoV: Introduction:This brief introduction provides an overview of emerging respiratory viruses, including nCoV.

Module A: Introduction to Emerging respiratory viruses, including nCoV:Overall learning objective: To be able to explain why an emerging respiratory virus, including nCoV are a global threat to human health

Module B: Detecting Emerging respiratory viruses, including nCoV: Surveillance and Laboratory investigation:Overall learning objective: To describe how to detect and assess an emerging respiratory virus outbreak

Module C: Risk Communication and Community Engagement:Overall learning objective: To describe what strategies should be used to communicate risk and engage communities to detect, prevent and respond to nCoV

Module D: Preventing and Responding to an emerging respiratory virus, including nCoV:Overall learning objective: To describe strategies for preventing and controlling emerging respiratory pathogens, including nCoV outbreaks.

Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses that are known to cause illness ranging from the common cold to more severe diseases such as Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

A novel coronavirus (CoV) was identified in 2019 in Wuhan, China. This is a new coronavirus that has not been previously identified in humans.  


Source https://openwho.org/courses/introduction-to-ncov


Thursday, February 13, 2020

WHO Update: World experts and funders set priorities for COVID-19 research

12 February 2020
News release
Geneva, Switzerland

Leading health experts from around the world have been meeting at the World Health Organization’s Geneva headquarters to assess the current level of knowledge about the new COVID-19 disease, identify gaps and work together to accelerate and fund priority research needed to help stop this outbreak and prepare for any future outbreaks.

The 2-day forum was convened in line with the WHO R&D Blueprint – a strategy for developing drugs and vaccines before epidemics, and accelerating research and development while they are occurring.

“This outbreak is a test of solidarity -- political, financial and scientific. We need to come together to fight a common enemy that does not respect borders, ensure that we have the resources necessary to bring this outbreak to an end and bring our best science to the forefront to find shared answers to shared problems. Research is an integral part of the outbreak response,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “I appreciate the positive response of the research community to join us at short notice and come up with concrete plans and commitment to work together.”

The meeting, hosted in collaboration with GloPID-R (the Global Research Collaboration for Infectious Disease Preparedness) brought together major research funders and over 300 scientists and researchers from a large variety of disciplines. They discussed all aspects of the outbreak and ways to control it including: the natural history of the virus, its transmission and diagnosis;
animal and environmental research on the origin of the virus, including management measures at the human-animal interface; epidemiological studies; clinical characterization and management of disease caused by the virus; infection prevention and control, including best ways to protect health care workers; research and development for candidate therapeutics and vaccines; ethical considerations for research; and integration of social sciences into the outbreak response.

“This meeting allowed us to identify the urgent priorities for research. As a group of funders we will continue to mobilize, coordinate and align our funding to enable the research needed to tackle this crisis and stop the outbreak, in partnership with WHO,” said Professor Yazdan Yazdanpanah, chair of GloPID-R. “Equitable access – making sure we share data and reach those most in need, in particular those in lower and middle-income countries, is fundamental to this work which must be guided by ethical considerations at all times.”

During the meeting, the more than 300 scientists and researchers participating both in person and virtually agreed on a set of global research priorities. They also outlined mechanisms for continuing scientific interactions and collaborations beyond the meeting which will be coordinated and facilitated by WHO. They worked with research funders to determine how necessary resources can be mobilized so that critical research can start immediately.

The deliberations will form the basis of a research and innovation roadmap charting all the research needed and this will be used by researchers and funders to accelerate the research response.

GloPID-R is a global alliance of international research funding organizations investing in preparedness and response to epidemics.



Friday, January 31, 2020

Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) advice for the public

Novel Coronavirus 2019


Advice for public

Situation reports
Media resources

Technical guidance



Travel advice



WHO’s standard recommendations for the general public to reduce exposure to and transmission of a range of illnesses are as follows, which include hand and respiratory hygiene, and safe food practices:

Frequently clean hands by using alcohol-based hand rub or soap and water;
When coughing and sneezing cover mouth and nose with flexed elbow or tissue – throw tissue away immediately and wash hands;
Avoid close contact with anyone who has fever and cough;
If you have fever, cough and difficulty breathing seek medical care early and share previous travel history with your health care provider;
When visiting live markets in areas currently experiencing cases of novel coronavirus, avoid direct unprotected contact with live animals and surfaces in contact with animals;
The consumption of raw or undercooked animal products should be avoided. Raw meat, milk or animal organs should be handled with care, to avoid cross-contamination with uncooked foods, as per good food safety practices.

Protect yourself and others from getting sick









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Practice food safety









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Shopping/Working in wet markets in China and Souteast Asia









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Stay healthy while travelling









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Thursday, January 23, 2020

WHO training for caregivers of children with developmental disabilities





The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global Strategy for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health calls for the provision of nurturing care to all children. This means a stable, protective and emotionally supportive environment set up by parents and other caregivers that promotes the child’s good health and learning. Given the additional challenges that they experience, parents of children with developmental delays or disorders should be specifically supported in providing nurturing care within a ‘whole family’ approach.

The WHO Caregiver Skills Training programme

Based on the available evidence and experts’ and target users’ guidance, WHO, along with international partners, developed a novel, open-access programme for families of children with developmental delays or disorders, including autism, which could be implemented in low-resource settings by non-specialists. The programme uses a family-centred approach and is designed to be delivered by non specialists (nurses, community-based workers or peer caregivers) as part of a network of health and social services for children and families.
The WHO CST consists of nine group sessions and three individual home visits, focused on training the caregiver on how to use everyday play and home activities and routines as opportunities for learning and development. The sessions specifically address communication, engagement, daily living skills, challenging behaviour and caregiver coping strategies. Additional, booster modules on caregiver well-being and for minimally verbal children are available

Field testing and the way forward

The WHO CST programme is currently undergoing field testing in more than 30 countries in regions throughout the world, including high-, low- and middle-income countries. Two randomised controlled trials are underway in Pakistan and Italy, and future trials are planned in China, Ethiopia and Kenya. More than 300 professionals have been trained and more than 2550 families have received the intervention.
With previous research highlighting the effectiveness of caregiver-mediated interventions and preliminary evidence of good acceptability and feasibility of the WHO CST programme in communities worldwide, the programme is working towards the goal of closing the gap in access to care for children with developmental disorders and delays, ultimately aiming to help them reach their optimal developmental potential.
Miguel Mendes
The WHO Caregiver Skills Training programme for families of children with developmental delays and disorders is available upon request.




Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Adopting a healthy lifestyle helps reduce the risk of dementia- WHO

People can reduce their risk of dementia by getting regular exercise, not smoking, avoiding harmful use of alcohol, controlling their weight, eating a healthy diet, and maintaining healthy blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels, according to new guidelines issued by the World Health Organization (WHO) today.

“In the next 30 years, the number of people with dementia is expected to triple,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “We need to do everything we can to reduce our risk of dementia. The scientific evidence gathered for these Guidelines confirm what we have suspected for some time, that what is good for our heart, is also good for our brain.”

The Guidelines provide the knowledge base for health-care providers to advise patients on what they can do to help prevent cognitive decline and dementia. They will also be useful for governments, policy-makers and planning authorities to guide them in developing policy and designing programmes that encourage healthy lifestyles.

The reduction of risk factors for dementia is one of several areas of action included in WHO’s Global action plan for the public health response to dementia. Other areas include: strengthening information systems for dementia; diagnosis, treatment and care; supporting carers of people with dementia; and research and innovation.

WHO’s Global Dementia Observatory, launched in December 2017, is a compilation of information about country activities and resources for dementia, such as national plans, dementia-friendly initiatives, awareness campaigns and facilities for care. Data from 21 countries, including Bangladesh, Chile, France, Japan, Jordan and Togo, have already been included, with a total of 80 countries now engaged in providing data.

Creating national policies and plans for dementia are among WHO’s key recommendations for countries in their efforts to manage this growing health challenge. During 2018, WHO provided support to countries such as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Qatar, Slovenia and Sri Lanka to help them develop a comprehensive, multi-sectoral public health response to dementia.

An essential element of every national dementia plan is support for carers of people with dementia, said Dr Dévora Kestel, Director of the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse at WHO. “Dementia carers are very often family members who need to make considerable adjustments to their family and professional lives to care for their loved ones. This is why WHO created iSupport. iSupport is an online training programme providing carers of people with dementia with advice on overall management of care, dealing with behaviour changes and how to look after their own health.”

iSupport is currently being used in eight countries, with more expected to follow.

Dementia: a rapidly growing public health problem

Dementia is an illness characterized by a deterioration in cognitive function beyond what might be expected from normal ageing. It affects memory, thinking, orientation, comprehension, calculation, learning capacity, language and judgement. Dementia results from a variety of diseases and injuries that affect the brain, such as Alzheimer disease or stroke.

Dementia is a rapidly growing public health problem affecting around 50 million people globally. There are nearly 10 million new cases every year. Dementia is a major cause of disability and dependency among older people. Additionally, the disease inflicts a heavy economic burden on societies as a whole, with the costs of caring for people with dementia estimated to rise to US$ 2 trillion annually by 2030.

New WHO Guidelines recommend specific interventions for reducing the risk of cognitive decline and dementia


WHO: Thirteenth general programme of work 2019−2023

Major global health gains have been made in recent years, yet complex, interconnected threats − from poverty and inequality to conflict and climate change – remain.


Based on the Sustainable Development Goals, the 13th General Programme of Work (GPW) sets out WHO’s strategic direction for the next five years. It also outlines how the Programme will be implemented and provides a framework to measure progress.


The central focus of GPW 13 is impact in countries. It articulates WHO’s mission to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable.


GPW 13 is structured around key interconnected strategic priorities:
ensuring healthy lives and well-being for all at all ages;
achieving universal health coverage;
addressing health emergencies and promoting healthier populations.




These priorities are linked to three bold targets:

One billion more people to benefit from universal health coverage.
One billion more people better protected from health emergencies; and,
One billion more people enjoying better health and well-being.




They are supported by three strategic shifts:

stepping up leadership;
driving public health impact in every country; and,
focusing global public goods on impact.




WHO is committed to ensuring gender equality, equity and rights-based approaches to health that enhance participation, build resilience and empower communities.



Making WHO fit-for-purpose

To boost impact for the people we serve, WHO announced the most wide-ranging reforms in the Organization’s history in March 2019.

WHO’s transformation, aligned with the wider United Nations reform agenda, also aims to enhance our normative and technical work to ensure it better meets the needs of all 194 Member States.

Our goal is clear - to make WHO a modern organization that works seamlessly to make a measurable difference in people’s health at country level.

There are five key elements:
The GPW
A new operating model
Fit-for-purpose processes and tools
Organizational culture and staff engagement
New external engagement actions and new partnerships



After establishing our new strategy, the GPW13, we embarked on a radical redesign of our core processes and operating model to enable our vision of a WHO that works seamlessly to deliver on the triple billion targets and beyond.WHO Headquarters adopts the new structure in January 2020, and Regional and Country Offices are restructuring and aligning to the new model.




The Seventy-first World Health Assembly has approved WHO's 13th General Programme of Work (GPW13).
Thirteenth general programme of work, 2019-2023
Also available in: Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, Spanish
Triple Billion Targets: Results Report 2018-19
Draft Proposed programme budget 2020–2021
Draft Working Document on the Operationalization of the Proposed Programme Budget 2020-2021
Information Note on the Budgetary Aspects of Polio Eradication and Polio Transition
Proposed programme budget 2020-2021

https://www.who.int/about/what-we-do/thirteenth-general-programme-of-work-2019---2023

#ASEAN2017:

#ASEAN2017:
Presidential Communications Operations Office – Committee on Media Affairs and Strategic Communications (PCOO – CMASC) in partnership w/ Asia Society Philippines & Asian Institute of Management (AIM) hosted the ASEAN 2017 Dialogues held 11 July 2017 at AIM, Makati, Philippines. Attending the dialogue is Amb.Zara Jane Juan, Convener , Climate Change Peace Building for United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNDSG) of sailing for peace United Nation's International Day of Peace Vigil MALUSOG ANG PINOY! United Nations Friends Photo Credit: Aloy Menez

Senator Angara with Ambassador Zara Jane Juan

Senator Angara with Ambassador Zara Jane Juan
@NCCA