logo
Social services veteran Anita Fam gets MSF's first Lifetime Achievement Award

Social services veteran Anita Fam gets MSF's first Lifetime Achievement Award

Straits Times25-07-2025
Ms Anita Fam said one of her main goals is to help charities build their capabilities by enabling them to invest in talent and retain it.
SINGAPORE – About three decades ago, former lawyer Anita Fam saw a physiotherapist help a girl walk for the first time.
This was at Singapore's first school for children with multiple disabilities, where she witnessed the school's first – and only – physiotherapist at work.
Later, she accepted a request from AWWA's late founder Leaena Tambyah to join its board as legal adviser.
'Just to see that look of sheer joy on the girl's face, that she could do this, is something I will never forget,' said the 62-year-old Ms Fam, who is currently the president of the National Council of Social Service.
The move set her on a journey of social service, which has lasted well over 20 years and has seen her holding key roles in the National Healthcare Group Board, Singapore Hospice Council and St Andrew's Autism Centre, among others.
She has contributed to improving mental health and palliative care in Singapore, along with efforts geared towards those living with disability.
These contributions were recognised on July 25 when Ms Fam was given the Ministry of Social and Family Development's (MSF) inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award at the Sands Expo & Convention Centre.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore SMRT to pay lower fine of $2.4m for EWL disruption; must invest at least $600k to boost reliability
Singapore MRT service changes needed to modify 3 East-West Line stations on Changi Airport stretch: LTA
Asia Live: Thailand-Cambodia border clashes continue for second day
Singapore Lung damage, poor brain development, addiction: What vaping does to the body
Life 'Do you kill children?': Even before independence, S'pore has always loved its over-the-top campaigns
Singapore S'pore could have nuclear energy 'within a few years', if it decides on it: UN nuclear watchdog chief
Singapore Fine for couple whose catering companies owed $432,000 in salaries to 103 employees
Singapore Kopi, care and conversation: How this 20-year-old helps improve the well-being of the elderly
The award, now one of MSF's Volunteer and Partner Awards, honours exceptional individuals for their remarkable contributions to the community for 20 years or more.
MSF's awards recognise the impact of volunteers, social service agencies (SSAs) and corporate partners.
Apart from the Lifetime Achievement Award, three other awards were introduced this year: the Outstanding Agency Award for exemplary SSAs, the Outstanding Partner Award for impactful partner organisations, and the Lifetime Service Award for volunteers who have served with MSF for 25 years.
A total of 140 volunteers and partners were recognised on July 25. Their contributions range from foster parenting to supporting programmes for lower-income families and youths at risk.
Social service agencies Samaritans of Singapore, Fei Yue Community Services and Rainbow Centre received the Outstanding Agency Award, while corporates DBS and SP Group got the Outstanding Partner Award.
Minister for Social and Family Development Masagos Zulkifli said at the ceremony that the refreshed awards better recognise the impact that volunteers, SSAs and corporate partners have made.
He noted that there has been a shift from ad-hoc volunteering to sustained and skill-based volunteerism, along with a shift towards sustainable philanthropy for corporates.
He said MSF will roll out a foundational training programme for new volunteers in 2025. The programme was co-created with the Singapore University of Social Sciences, and comes in response to volunteers' feedback for more learning and development opportunities.
Ms Fam told The Straits Times one of her main goals is to help charities build their capabilities by enabling them to invest in talent and retain it.
This is done through various initiatives such as the sector salary guidelines and the Community Capability Trust that aims to resource the sector with $480 million over 10 years to strengthen SSAs' organisational capabilities.
Fund raising is a challenge for charities.
Minister for Social and Family Development Masagos Zulkifli presenting the inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award to Ms Anita Fam.
PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
Ms Fam recalled that during the Covid-19 pandemic, she was worried about SSAs, as their services were disrupted. The first support measures the Government introduced was to prop up businesses, and she lost sleep over SSAs, which rely on public donations, being left to fund raise by themselves.
'How would they continue – the isolated seniors, the persons with disabilities, who are so reliant on therapy and other interventions? We really didn't know how long everything would last,' said Ms Fam, who was the chairwoman at Assisi Hospice at the time.
In 2020, she started a fund for these charities by forking out $1 million of her own. She then called NCSS Community Chest chairman Phillip Tan, who helped top up the fund to $5 million. And later, the Government and community also chipped in, and the fund snowballed to more than $28 million.
The Invictus Fund was able to support 90 social service agencies through the pandemic.
Ms Fam said she has seen the sector evolve from being poorly funded and volunteer-run, with SSAs formerly known as 'voluntary welfare organisations', to becoming better-resourced and more cognisant of the need for corporate services.
She recalled how the special education sector started out without trained principals or a proper curriculum, but became professionalised over the years.
Ms Fam acknowledged that every time the salary benchmarks are raised, it increases the pressure on SSAs to fund raise.
'But at the same time, the ones who are stronger in what they do are the ones who have probably invested way more selectively into the quality of manpower that they have, and it's reflective of the services,' she said.
Ms Fam hopes to change minds of donors and SSAs from wanting to ensure money goes straight to beneficiaries, to investing in SSAs to do far more with the money invested in them.
She also hopes SSAs can work together with each other, as well as with social enterprises and for-profit companies, to serve vulnerable groups.
Ms Fam said that better collaboration among SSAs would ensure clients do not have to give the same information to several different agencies serving them.
Of her decades-long journey, she said: 'I've never engineered any of the commitments and responsibilities that I have taken on. I've always responded to a need or request.
'If I can make a difference in some small way, then I will do so.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

20 hospitals in Thailand impacted by Thai-Cambodia border conflict; 9 closed
20 hospitals in Thailand impacted by Thai-Cambodia border conflict; 9 closed

Straits Times

time21 hours ago

  • Straits Times

20 hospitals in Thailand impacted by Thai-Cambodia border conflict; 9 closed

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The conflict has also affected healthcare facilities, with 20 hospitals impacted. BANGKOK - Seventeen Thai civilians have died in the Thailand-Cambodia border conflict as of July 31, said Thailand's Ministry of Public Health. The conflict has also affected healthcare facilities , with 20 hospitals impacted—nine have completely closed, and 11 have partially suspended services. Additionally, 139 community health centres have been affected, with 128 fully closed and 11 partially closed. Dr Varoth Chotpitayasunodh, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Public Health, said that 12 people remain seriously injured, 13 moderately injured, and 13 with minor injuries. Nine patients remain hospitalised, with six in critical condition and three with moderate injuries. A total of 21 patients have been discharged after treatment. The ministry has deployed 445 public health teams out of the 1,167 prepared, including Medical Emergency Response Teams, Mini MERT, Advanced Life Support, Joint Investigation Teams, Mental Health Crisis Assessment and Treatment Teams (MCATT), and Special Environmental Health Response Teams. Another 43 support teams are on standby for further deployment to high-risk areas. In terms of mental health care, 54,506 people have been screened, with 1,603 identified as experiencing high levels of stress and 231 at risk of suicide. The MCATT, along with psychologists and psychiatrists, are assisting, with those in critical condition being prescribed medication and referred for further hospital care. THE NATION/ ASIA NEWS NETWORK

Bird flu wiped out poultry, and now the screwworm is coming for beef
Bird flu wiped out poultry, and now the screwworm is coming for beef

Straits Times

time3 days ago

  • Straits Times

Bird flu wiped out poultry, and now the screwworm is coming for beef

AUSTIN, Texas – First came bird flu, which led to the culling of large swaths of the nation's poultry flocks and the soaring egg prices that helped undermine President Joe Biden's reelection. Now, ranchers in Texas and officials at the Agriculture Department are raising the next alarm: the New World screwworm. Texas livestock producers and ranchers fear that the United States is ill-equipped to handle a potential outbreak of screwworm, whose incursion into the country appears increasingly likely. With beef prices already soaring, the screwworm, whose Latin name roughly translates to 'man-eater,' is a real threat, to both cows and the cost of living for America's meat lovers. 'If we wait, we lose,' Mr Stephen Diebel, vice-president of the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, told state lawmakers during a hearing in Austin this month as he pleaded for intervention. The screwworm, like the measles, may have been forgotten by many, but it's not new. And like the measles, which has cropped up in Texas recently, screwworm was once all but eradicated from the United States. Infestations occur when a female fly lays eggs, between 10 and 400 at a time, on a fresh animal wound. Within a few hours, the eggs hatch into larvae that burrow and feed on the flesh. As the wound worsens, it attracts more flies, which lay more eggs. After about a week, adult screwworm flies can reproduce and begin the cycle all over again. The parasitic infection can kill a cow within two weeks if left untreated. There is currently no approved treatment. 'It's like something out of a horror movie,' the Texas agriculture commissioner, Mr Sid Miller, said in an interview. He saw distressed cattle infested with screwworm when he was a child in the early 1960s before it was nearly eradicated. 'It's quite a putrid sight,' he said. Livestock, wildlife, pets and, in rare cases, humans can be affected. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Business No clarity yet on baseline or pharmaceutical tariffs with US: DPM Gan Singapore Grace Fu apologises for Tanjong Katong sinkhole, says road may stay closed for a few more days Asia Fragile Thailand-Cambodia truce faces challenges on day one Opinion Nobel Prize? Maybe not, but give Asean credit for Cambodia-Thailand ceasefire Singapore Facts and myths intersect at the National Museum's new glass rotunda installation Singapore Liquidators score victory to recoup over $900 million from alleged scammer Ng Yu Zhi's associates Multimedia Making a splash: Picture-perfect moments from the World Aquatics Championships in S'pore Singapore Terrorism threat in Singapore remains high, driven by events like Israeli-Palestinian conflict: ISD In the 1950s, scientists discovered that radiation effectively sterilises screwworm flies, and the federal government began an eradication program. A small outbreak in a deer population in the Florida Keys was snuffed out in 2017. Now, a potentially bigger threat is approaching, migrating north from South America, where screwworm is endemic. It has been detected as close as 370 miles (595km) from Texas' border, carried by the surge of animals coming through the Darien Gap, a once largely impenetrable jungle area that separates South America and Central America. A joint eradication effort between the United States and Panama has largely kept screwworm south of Central America for decades. Illegal livestock transport and warm weather patterns have also contributed to the worm's climb north, a spokesperson for the Agriculture Department said. 'For small herds, it could wipe us out,' said Ms Shelbie Pippenger, who, with her husband, has a small herd in Texas and helps manage other ranches. 'Once something starts, it's difficult to stop it.' Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced in June an US$8.5 million (S$10.95 million) initiative based in Texas that will produce sterile male screwworm flies and then drop them into affected areas. Female flies mate only once in their lifetime, so the sterile flies eventually overwhelm and eradicate the pest. Ms Rollins also committed US$21 million to renovate a fly production facility in Mexico, where 60 million to 100 million sterile male flies would be produced each week for use in Mexico or Texas by the end of the year. But that effort would yield only about 20 per cent of the sterile flies the United States would need to manage an outbreak, experts said. Around 600 million flies were released each week to eradicate screwworm decades ago. Senator John Cornyn introduced legislation that would provide US$300 million to construct a facility to breed and sterilise flies, but the House has left Washington for the summer. 'We are desperately short on sterile fly production,' Mr Diebel said. Even before the fear of pestilence, the industry was facing challenges. Drought and high feed prices have pushed the American cattle inventory to the lowest it has been since 1952, according to the Agriculture Department. Domestic beef prices hit record highs in May, at an average of US$5.98 per pound for ground beef, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Beef from Brazil, the world's largest beef exporter, could bring some price relief, although President Donald Trump has promised to impose a 50 per cent tariff on Brazilian imports, beginning in August. And now, the screwworm is threatening to wipe out whole cattle herds in the United States. The tusklike mandibles protruding from the screwworm larva's mouth. The larva, left by a parasitic fly on a fresh animal wound, attracts more flies eventually killing a cow within two weeks. PHOTO: JOHN KUCHARSKI/U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE/NYTIMES Before the screwworm was eradicated, US beef producers experienced as much as US$20 million of economic loss each year from animal deaths, decreased livestock production, increased veterinary costs and other expenses, according to the Agriculture Department. Texas Governor Greg Abbott did not respond to questions about whether he would approve state funding for a fly factory. Mr Abbott has directed the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and the Texas Animal Health Commission to create a response team to lead the state's screwworm preparations. Meanwhile, based on how fast the screwworm is traveling, Mr Miller said it could reach Texas within four months. In economic terms, the screwworm is already here, modestly at least. About 3 per cent of US cattle come from Mexico, but citing inadequate surveillance of screwworm, the Agriculture Department cut off imports of Mexican cattle in November 2024. Federal officials resumed the trade in February after Mexico put in place more rigorous inspection protocols. But imports were shut off again in May after the pest was detected in Veracruz and Oaxaca. NYTIMES

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store