
Vietnam facing worsening African swine fever outbreaks
HANOI: Vietnam has been hit by an increasing number of outbreaks of African swine fever, with the number of infected pigs more than tripling in just two weeks, state media said on Tuesday (Aug 5).
The country has detected 972 African swine fever outbreaks so far this year, up from 514 reported in mid-July, the Tien Phong newspaper reported.
The number of pigs infected has risen to more than 100,000 from 30,000 over the same period, the paper said, citing Vietnam's agriculture ministry. The infected pigs have died or been culled.
"ASF has broken out on a very large scale, spreading across the country, seriously affecting the livestock industry, especially the supply of pork," Nguyen Xuan Duong, chairman of the Animal Husbandry Association of Vietnam, was quoted as saying. He added that no province is safe from the disease.
African swine fever has disrupted the global pork market for years. In the worst outbreak over 2018-19, about half the domestic pig population died in China, the world's biggest producer, causing losses estimated at over US$100 billion.
The outbreaks in Vietnam last month prompted Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh to send an urgent directive to provinces and government agencies to deploy measures to curb the disease, which the government said was threatening to disrupt food supplies.
Though Vietnam was the first country reportedly to have developed an African swine fever vaccine that has been in commercial use since 2023, officials said the vaccination rate was low due to concerns about costs and efficiency.
"Vaccination is just a supporting tool that cannot replace basic prevention measures," Duong said.
AVAC Vietnam JSC, the country's main African swine fever vaccine producer, didn't respond to Reuters' request for comment.
AVAC said in June it had sold three million vaccine doses in the domestic market and exported 600,000 doses to other countries, including the Philippines and Indonesia. - Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
31 minutes ago
- The Star
Gates Foundation commits US$2.5bil for women's health
Gates Foundation chair Bill Gates. — Bloomberg NEW YORK: The Gates Foundation will spend US$2.5bil over the next five years on projects related to women's health, just as the US government pulls back on science research and international development. Bill Gates, chair of the foundation and co-founder of Microsoft Corp, also told Bloomberg in an interview that he recently spoke with President Donald Trump about the foundation's years-long work with the National Institutes of Health on a gene-based cure for HIV. Trump was curious about the project, but Gates told him that the current level of backing was unknown. 'I said, 'No, it's still up in the air how much US government support we'll get for that',' Gates said he told the president. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Gates Foundation announcement provides the most detail yet on one area where the foundation plans to use its remaining funds before it shuts down in 2045. This tranche of money will focus on women's health, targeting critical areas that particularly hit women in low and middle-income countries. 'Women's health continues to be ignored, underfunded and sidelined,' Gates said in a statement earlier on Monday. 'Too many women still die from preventable causes or live in poor health. That must change.' The Gates Foundation previously said it would spend US$200bil over the next 20 years to close out its operations, a quicker timeline than its original plan of shuttering 20 years after Gates' death. The United States pulled out of the World Health Organisation in January, then in March shut down the US Agency for International Development, which managed 10s of billions of dollars of foreign aid. The US government has also made it more difficult for researchers to get funding, cutting staff across federal health agencies, including the National Institutes of Health, the largest public funder of biomedical research. 'Certainly, there's been some short-term disruption and uncertainty,' Gates said in the interview. Gates said that he also met with Health and Human Services secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr about two weeks ago and talked about things they could work together on. Gates was optimistic about the future of US research and development funding. 'I really don't know that it's going to be that disrupted,' he said. 'That may sound optimistic, and I may end up being wrong about that.' The billionaire, along with his former wife Melinda French Gates, have given US$60.2bil to the foundation through the end of 2024. The foundation says its new spending will support a myriad of projects, including portable ultrasound machines used during pregnancy, contraception delivered via microneedle patches stuck on the skin and basic research on the microbiome. It called on other public and private entities to increase funding for women's health. Industry support is particularly important, said Rasa Izadnegahdar, director of maternal, newborn, child nutrition and health at the Gates Foundation. Pharmaceutical companies have the expertise to take early research and move it through into product development, he said in an interview. 'We see this need for other bigger players to actually come along, particularly those in industry, to move this forward,' he said. — Bloomberg


The Star
3 hours ago
- The Star
Could dementia patients benefit from an AI companion?
When Frank Poulsen, 72, first started talking to artificial intelligence companion Sunny earlier this year, she was 'kind of formal', he said. But over time, their conversations have become more familiar and engaging. 'It's really uncanny,' he said, adding, 'It really does feel like you're having a conversation with someone who's interested.' One advantage of Sunny is that she doesn't mind when Poulsen, who was diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment in 2019, repeats himself. 'He can tell a story and forget he told it and tell it again,' said Poulsen's wife and caregiver, Cheryl Poulsen. 'Sunny has no judgment.' Sunny, which was developed by AI startup NewDays, is part of a rapidly expanding body of AI products designed to help people with dementia. 'I've never seen something quite like this in terms of a technology moving as quickly as it is, with as much money poured behind it,' said Luke Stoeckel, a program director and project scientist at the National Institute on Aging, who works on AI applications for dementia care. Stoeckel mentioned AI-based dementia diagnostics as another hot area. Experts say AI companions like Sunny have the potential to help keep the brain active and alleviate loneliness in dementia patients, and to reduce some of the burden on caregivers. But there can be risks when it comes to deploying this technology in such a vulnerable population. A conversation partner Babak Parviz, the co-founder and CEO of NewDays, said he was inspired to develop Sunny in part by his own father's diagnosis with Alzheimer's disease. He knew there was no cure but he was encouraged by research showing that cognitive training exercises and guided conversations with a clinician can, in some cases, improve dementia symptoms. Few people receive that level of in-depth care, though. 'We don't have millions of trained professionals, and even if we had them, the cost would be quite prohibitive,' Parviz said. Generative AI technology could help expand the reach of these therapies, he said. NewDays' program, which is in the process of being rolled out, costs US$99 a month and is intended to be used by people with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia. Sometimes Sunny prompts the person to reminisce about old memories. Other times it leads them through more explicit cognitive training exercises, like asking them to remember and use specific words in a sentence. NewDays also has an in-house team of clinicians (not included in the monthly fee) to oversee the patient's care and provide feedback to the AI system. When Frank Poulsen opens up his computer and converses with Sunny, it sounds like 'he was just having a chat, like he was talking to a friend,' Cheryl Poulsen said. NewDays' website claims that its program can 'delay decline and improve quality of life' and that it is 'backed by a large body of evidence from more than 500 clinical trials and papers.' That includes the I-CONECT study, which found that, over the course of six months, 'cognitively stimulating semistructured conversations with trained interviewers' conducted virtually improved cognition in older adults with mild cognitive impairment. But in those studies, the conversations and brain training exercises were led by humans, said Julian De Freitas, director of the Ethical Intelligence Lab at Harvard Business School. Talking to an AI companion could produce different results, he added. NewDays has not run any studies yet about whether using its program confers the same benefits. Parviz said that Sunny's conversations are similar to a human's and that his team is 'pretty confident' it will see results comparable to what the existing clinical trials have demonstrated. But he did not provide data to back that up. There is more compelling evidence that an AI companion can help people feel less lonely – a serious concern for older adults, whether or not they have cognitive impairment. De Freitas' own research has demonstrated that, at least in healthy adults, talking to an empathetic chatbot is roughly as good at reducing loneliness as having a conversation with a human stranger. Anecdotally, Dr. Joe Verghese, the chair of the neurology department at Stony Brook University Renaissance School of Medicine, said that the caregivers of some of his dementia patients reported that talking to an AI companion lifted their loved ones' moods. 'I don't think these actually improve cognition just by those interactions,' Verghese said. 'But certainly improving quality of life and improving mood in patients with cognitive impairment is an important outcome in itself.' An extra set of eyes AI companions could also be a boon for caregivers and families because they can serve as an extra set of eyes and ears, particularly for people living in memory facilities. One AI startup, CloudMind, has been pilot testing its software, called BrightPath, in a handful of memory care homes. The companion, via an app on a smartphone or tablet, chats with dementia patients about their favorite memories and hobbies; in one instance, a patient and the companion even sang together. In addition to facilitating conversation, BrightPath produces a daily summary of what the patient talked about and an assessment of the patient's mood. For the family, that can provide 'a peek of their loved one's life, even if they're apart,' said Monica Tsai, CloudMind's CEO The AI companion might also help nursing staff identify problems faster. If it hears certain key prompts, like 'I'm thirsty' or 'I fell,' BrightPath is programmed to instruct the patient to ring their call button. While experts say there is real potential for AI to benefit adults with cognitive impairment, they also have some serious concerns. One is privacy. 'The more humanlike the chatbot is, the more you're disclosing various information about yourself,' De Freitas said. 'If this data is housed at a company, it could monetize that. It could also accidentally leak that information if it's hacked.' There is also a risk of further isolation if families or care home staff use the technology as a replacement for human interaction, rather than as an add-on. 'That would be tragic,' Verghese said. In addition, AI chatbots are known to make things up and take conversations down dark and disturbing paths, which could be especially confusing and distressing for a person with dementia. Parviz and Tsai both acknowledged such hallucinations as a potential issue and said they had programmed 'guardrails' into their AI software to prevent them from happening. But neither specified how that might work. 'We have to remember that this is a very vulnerable population,' De Freitas said, adding: 'We need to think about having additional protections.' – ©2025 The New York Times Company This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


New Straits Times
4 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Government may lift pork import ban from Thailand to stabilise prices
KUALA LUMPUR: The Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) is considering lifting the ban on pork imports from Thailand as part of efforts to address the rising cost of pork in the market, following recent outbreaks of African Swine Fever (ASF). Agriculture and Food Security Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Sabu said the ministry had reassessed the risk analysis related to ASF and was reviewing the possibility of reallowing pork imports from Thailand, which were suspended in 2019. Apart from Thailand, the other exporting countries were China, Poland, Belgium, Vietnam and Cambodia. "The consideration is subject to full compliance with Malaysia's veterinary import requirements, including audit inspections and formal approval by DVS," he said in a written reply to Cha Kee Chin (PH–Rasah) in the Dewan Rakyat. Mohamad said the decision would also take into account the current demand and the need to ensure adequate supply. He said the ministry had taken several steps to strengthen pork supply, including approving 130 abattoirs from nine countries to export pork to Malaysia, and facilitating the export of live pigs from Sarawak to Selangor for slaughter purposes. "These measures are necessary to support the local supply chain and stabilise prices, especially in Peninsular Malaysia," he added. Mohamad also said DVS was in the process of evaluating Brazil as a potential new source country for pork imports. On the ASF situation, he confirmed that the disease remains endemic in Malaysia. The latest outbreak was reported on July 9 in Kampung Selamat, Seberang Perai Utara, Penang, affecting three pig farms with a combined total of 2,799 pigs. "As of now, 578 pigs have been culled and disposed of, with 124 deaths reported. Eradication efforts at the affected farms are still ongoing," he said. The Penang Veterinary Services Department has implemented several control measures at the outbreak sites, including restrictions on livestock movement, culling of infected animals, and disinfection of the premises.