'Some call it Paradise, We call it Home'. Home to over 10 000 people, The Warakamb Valley has unique people, culture and heritage. This is a blog of this beautiful valley, located deep in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea at the border of Enga, Hela and Southern Highlands Provinces.
New
Clicke here; Warakamb PNG You tube Channel; to see the Warakamb PNG Live Channel.
Click on above link for the latest videos from Warakamb valley PNG. See latest happenings, events, changes, people and many more.
Click on above link for the latest videos from Warakamb valley PNG. See latest happenings, events, changes, people and many more.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Loma Linda University
Just some information on Loma Linda University Medical center. It is one organisation that will help in setting up the new Hospital. Hopefully, there will be some thing in concrete pretty soon.
About Loma Linda University Medical Center
An outgrowth of the original Sanitarium on the hill in 1905, the present 11-story Loma Linda University Medical Center (LLUMC) opened on July 9, 1967. With the completion of the Loma Linda University Children's Hospital (LLUCH) in late 1993, nearly 900 beds are available for patient care, including at Loma Linda University Medical Center East Campus and Loma Linda University Behavioral Medicine Center (LLUBMC). Loma Linda University Health Care (LLUHC), a management service organization, supports the many programs and services provided by our 400+ faculty physicians. LLUMC operates some of the largest clinical programs in the United States in areas such as neonatal care and outpatient surgery and is recognized as the international leader in infant heart transplantation and proton treatments for cancer. Each year, the institution admits more than 33,000 inpatients and serves roughly half a million outpatients. LLUMC is the only level one regional trauma center for Inyo, Mono, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties.
Our Mission
The mission of Loma Linda University Medical Center is to continue the healing ministry of Jesus Christ, to make man whole, in a setting of advancing medical science and to provide a stimulating clinical and research environment for the education of physicians, nurses and other health professionals.
Our Vision
Innovating excellence in Christ-centered health care.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
New hospital for PNG?
Medical experts arrive
By MAUREEN GERAWA
THE proposed world class hospital to be built outside Port Moresby is aimed at lifting the health care in the country and will not put pressure on the country’s existing health resources, including funds.
This is an assurance given by the United States partners in the project who are visiting the country this week to talk to various stakeholders in the $US500 million project.
Led by real estate developer Andrew Gerber, the group of nine people arrived on Sunday with the PNG ambassador to the US Evan Jeremy Paki. They began their visits to the Health Department, government officials and various institutions yesterday.
Each of these people are professionals in their own fields, but they have made a commitment to help uplift the entire country and the health care, not just for people in Port Moresby but also the health care facilities in other parts of the country, including the rural areas where the bulk of the country’s people live.
Team member and specialist in emergency medicine Dr Kelly Murphy has worked on the training of PNG medical officers in the past, especially in the rural areas and was awarded a PNG Independence medal. He said yesterday : “This is for real. We want to ensure a pregnant woman in a rural village is able to attend an antenatal clinic’’.
He said this when asked if this proposal would come to a reality for those who were not sure whether such a project would kick off, especially in light of many failed projects in the country.
Mr Gerber is working with this project as a volunteer and like others, is giving his own time and money to see our country go forward in the delivery of its health service.
He said yesterday that had it not been for people like the Secretary for the National Planning Department Joe Lelang he would not have got involved in the project in the first place.
He said Mr Lelang and various government officers as well as parliamentarians had given the team from the US a greenlight to go ahead and set up the project.
For a year or so, various team members including Mr Gerber have travelled into the country to work on the initial stages of the project.
A key component of the project will be on education and training of Papua New Guinea health work force, which the US partners in the project are ready to kick-start.
However, the team aims to ensure it works with the Health Department and its partners so that PNG’s health system does not suffer. For instance, if a hospital is to send a doctor to a US-based medical school, there should be someone on standby to replace him.
On questions regarding the funds for the new hospital, the team had assured that funds for the project would not be coming from the existing health funds.
The K20 million which the Government had put into the project was its show of commitment, but most of the funds for the hospital will be coming from outside the country, mostly through bilateral agreements and aid which this country has for so long not been able to put to good use.
The team will be meeting with Deputy Prime Minister Sir Puka Temu today.
By MAUREEN GERAWA
THE proposed world class hospital to be built outside Port Moresby is aimed at lifting the health care in the country and will not put pressure on the country’s existing health resources, including funds.
This is an assurance given by the United States partners in the project who are visiting the country this week to talk to various stakeholders in the $US500 million project.
Led by real estate developer Andrew Gerber, the group of nine people arrived on Sunday with the PNG ambassador to the US Evan Jeremy Paki. They began their visits to the Health Department, government officials and various institutions yesterday.
Each of these people are professionals in their own fields, but they have made a commitment to help uplift the entire country and the health care, not just for people in Port Moresby but also the health care facilities in other parts of the country, including the rural areas where the bulk of the country’s people live.
Team member and specialist in emergency medicine Dr Kelly Murphy has worked on the training of PNG medical officers in the past, especially in the rural areas and was awarded a PNG Independence medal. He said yesterday : “This is for real. We want to ensure a pregnant woman in a rural village is able to attend an antenatal clinic’’.
He said this when asked if this proposal would come to a reality for those who were not sure whether such a project would kick off, especially in light of many failed projects in the country.
Mr Gerber is working with this project as a volunteer and like others, is giving his own time and money to see our country go forward in the delivery of its health service.
He said yesterday that had it not been for people like the Secretary for the National Planning Department Joe Lelang he would not have got involved in the project in the first place.
He said Mr Lelang and various government officers as well as parliamentarians had given the team from the US a greenlight to go ahead and set up the project.
For a year or so, various team members including Mr Gerber have travelled into the country to work on the initial stages of the project.
A key component of the project will be on education and training of Papua New Guinea health work force, which the US partners in the project are ready to kick-start.
However, the team aims to ensure it works with the Health Department and its partners so that PNG’s health system does not suffer. For instance, if a hospital is to send a doctor to a US-based medical school, there should be someone on standby to replace him.
On questions regarding the funds for the new hospital, the team had assured that funds for the project would not be coming from the existing health funds.
The K20 million which the Government had put into the project was its show of commitment, but most of the funds for the hospital will be coming from outside the country, mostly through bilateral agreements and aid which this country has for so long not been able to put to good use.
The team will be meeting with Deputy Prime Minister Sir Puka Temu today.
Monday, February 22, 2010
New & Modern Hospital for PNG?
By MAUREEN GERAWA (Post Courier 22/2/10)
A WORLD class, fully equipped modern hospital is to be built in Papua New Guinea in a partnership involving the Government, the private sector and not-for-profit organisations around the world.
It will be known as the Pacific Medical Centre (PMC) and will be located on 2000 hectares of land between Port Moresby’s Six-Mile area and Bautama in Central Province.
Plans are for the project to be launched in April. Construction of the hospital will take two years.
At the weekend, a team from the United States, including the key senior officials on the planned K500 million hospital, travelled to Papua New Guinea to meet with senior officials of the Department of Health, senior doctors and officials of the Port Moresby General Hospital and the University of Papua New Guinea to begin work on the Cabinet-endorsed project.
The overseas team includes specialist doctors from Stanford University Medical Centre, Loma Linda University Medical Centre as well as experienced hospital architects and engineers from hospital design firm, Fletcher Thompson.
Health Minister Sasa Zibe, when announcing the project on Friday, said he was fully aware of the criticisms that would be coming against this initiative but PNG had to move forward by setting higher benchmarks for its people to aim for rather than moving around in a circle as it had for more than 30 years.
“It will be developed as the nation’s first world class, fully serviced modern hospital and one of the Asia Pacific Region’s leading centres of excellence in providing first rate tertiary health care services, medical education, capacity building and training programs for local hospital administrators, doctors and nurses,’’ said Mr Zibe.
He said to show its commitment the NEC approved K20 million in November for the project, which will improve and revolutionise health care services, hospital administration, medical education/training and outreach programs for the people.
A key component of the project will be education and training which will begin in June.
“As part of the project, we will have hospital administration professionals trained in America where up to 50 graduates will be trained in a year over a three-year program,’’ he said.
“In addition to this, there will be doctors exchange and training programs in American and Canadian hospitals, training of 10 – 15 local doctors for up to three months resulting in between 70 – 90 trained medical professionals a year for the next three years.’’
He said the 300-bed hospital would initially be linked to all regional, provincial and district hospitals so that the people will benefit from this state-of-the art medical and teaching facility.
Cabinet has recommended the establishment of a project co-ordinating committee called the Pacific Medical Centre Co-ordinating Committee (PMCCC) under the auspices of the Ministerial Economic Committee to work with the team leader/project developer to co-ordinate the government’s participation in this project.
Mr Zibe said many people in the country die while still seeking funds to be able to travel overseas and get specialist medical help or even while sorting out visa related issues and by having a modern hospital, patients would not have to travel overseas for specialist care.
He directed Health Secretary Dr Clement Malau and his management team to incorporate this project into the National Health Plan and work with the project management team to facilitate its implementation because the country was in great need of proper infrastructure in the health sector.
Eating for Longevity, Foods to keep your heart, brain, and bones healthy.
Source: By Peter Jaret
WebMD Feature Reviewed by Brunilda Nazario, MD
Is there such a thing as a longevity diet? Increasingly, studies suggest the answer is yes.
Around the world, certain groups of people enjoy exceptionally long lives. Consider the lucky people of Okinawa: These Pacific Islanders have an average life expectancy of more than 81 years, compared to 78 in the United States and a worldwide average of just 67. Closer to home, members of the Seventh Day Adventists, who typically eat vegetarian diets, outlive their neighbors by four to seven years on average.
The residents of the San Blas islands, meanwhile, off the coast of Panama, very rarely suffer from high blood pressure and heart disease. Indeed, research shows that their rate of heart disease is only nine per 100,000 people, compared to 83 per 100,000 among nearby mainland Panamanians.
What makes these groups so fortunate? A growing body of findings suggests that diet is one of the important contributors to longevity and a healthy life. WebMD examined the research and talked to the experts. Here’s what’s on the menu of people who enjoy long and healthy lives.
Foods for a Healthy Heart
Most of us know to go easy on saturated fat, the kind found in meat and high-fat dairy products. Saturated fats have been shown to raise blood cholesterol levels into the danger zone. Just as important is what you should be eating. For heart health and longevity, you should eat:
Plenty of fruits and vegetables: Plant-based foods are abundant in fiber and many vitamins and minerals. Packed with nutrients, they’re also relatively low in calories. Studies consistently show that diets plentiful in fruits and vegetables help people maintain a healthy weight and protect against cardiovascular disease.
Whole grains: Like fruits and vegetables, whole grains pack a lot of nutrition into a low-calorie package. Grains like oats and barley are also rich in a long list of disease-fighting compounds.
In findings from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis published in 2009, researchers at the University of Texas Health Sciences Center in Houston reported that participants whose diets included plenty of whole grains and fruit cut their heart disease risk by almost half compared to those whose diets favored meat and fatty foods. Findings from more than 161,000 nurses enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Study also show that whole grains protect against type 2 diabetes, a disease that in turn increases the danger of heart disease.
Nuts: For too long, nuts were banished from the list of healthy foods because they’re high in fat. They are. But the fat they contain is mostly unsaturated, which protects against heart disease.
Dark chocolate: Dark chocolate? That’s right. Researchers now think that high blood pressure and heart disease are exceedingly rare among residents of the San Blas islands because they eat chocolate, and lots of it. Components in dark chocolate called polyphenols are believed to lower blood pressure and improve the flexibility of blood vessels. In a 2008 study, researchers at the University of Aquila gave volunteers with hypertension 100 grams of dark chocolate daily. After 15 days, their blood pressure readings were significantly lower and their insulin sensitivity had improved.Foods for a Vital Brain
The basic advice is simple: What’s good for your heart and blood vessels is also good for your brain. That means eating a diet centered on fruits and vegetables, with plenty of unsaturated oils such as olive oil, and plenty of whole grains. Foods that may add extra protection include:
Blueberries and other antioxidant-rich fruits: Ongoing research at the Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University suggests that foods especially high in antioxidants, including blueberries, grape juice, and walnuts, protect against age-related changes in the brain that lead to memory loss and even dementia. Dark green leafy vegetables: Collard greens, spinach, and broccoli are good sources of calcium.
Tofu: Look for brands made with calcium sulfate, which contain the highest levels of calcium. A half-cup contains about 250 milligrams of calcium. (Adult women should consume about 1500 milligrams a day, according to Heaney.)
Unfortunately, getting enough vitamin D turns out to be trickier than getting enough calcium. Although many foods are fortified with vitamin D, diet alone isn’t able to provide enough. Our skin converts sunlight to vitamin D; but with age, that process becomes less efficient. (During the winter months in most parts of the United States, the sun is too weak to generate vitamin D production.)
While experts continue to debate the optimal levels of vitamin D, Heaney recommends taking 1,000 to 2,000 international units (IU) a day in supplement form. Boosting vitamin D is particularly important as you get older, he points out, since the skin becomes less efficient at generating this crucial nutrient from sunlight.
Beyond Nutrients: The Joy of Eating
A diet abundant in nutrients is obviously important to longevity. So is enjoying what you eat-- and especially finding joy in sitting down to meals with family and friends.
Studies of centenarians the world over suggest that social connections and finding meaning in life are both crucial to longevity. The long-lived people of Okinawa say one reason they enjoy long and healthy lives is something they call ikigai, or “finding your reason to live.”
Fish: High in omega-3 fats, fish and shellfish have been shown to protect against irregular heart rhythms than can lead to heart failure. New evidence suggests that in addition to heart protection, the fatty acids such as DHA and EPA found in fish oil (and ALA found in flaxseed) may offer a defense against depression and age-related memory loss.
Low-salt foods: Researchers have known for years that less salt in the diet means lower blood pressure. Now new evidence suggests that keeping blood pressure down may also protect brain cells and decrease the risk of age-related memory loss and even dementia.
“High blood pressure can damage the vasculature that supplies the brain with oxygen and nutrients,” explains Tufts University neuroscientist Aron Troen, PhD. That may explain why people with chronic hypertension seem to be at higher risk of developing age-related cognitive impairments.
Coffee: A growing number of studies suggest that coffee has several surprising health benefits. Along with potentially lowering the risk of type 2 diabetes, consumption of coffee may reduce the risk of age-related mental decline.
The latest evidence, from a Finish study of 1,409 volunteers published in the Journal of Alzheimers Disease in 2009, found that people who regularly drank coffee during their middle-aged years were significantly less likely to suffer dementia and Alzheimer’s later in life. Those who drank three to five cups daily had a 65% reduction in risk.
Foods for Strong Bones
Bone loss and osteoporosis are among the leading reasons for disability in later life. And once seniors become disabled, their health often declines in many other ways. Although some bone loss is inevitable as we age, eating foods rich in calcium and vitamin D can slow the process and prevent disabling fractures. Among the top choices:
Low-fat dairy products: “The body needs vitamin D in order to absorb calcium,” says Robert P Heaney, MD, professor of medicine at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., and a leading expert on osteoporosis. “But adequate levels of protein are also necessary to keep bones strong.” For that reason, he argues, dairy products like milk and yogurt are the best sources of calcium because they contain the full array of nutrients needed for healthy bones.
WebMD Feature Reviewed by Brunilda Nazario, MD
Is there such a thing as a longevity diet? Increasingly, studies suggest the answer is yes.
Around the world, certain groups of people enjoy exceptionally long lives. Consider the lucky people of Okinawa: These Pacific Islanders have an average life expectancy of more than 81 years, compared to 78 in the United States and a worldwide average of just 67. Closer to home, members of the Seventh Day Adventists, who typically eat vegetarian diets, outlive their neighbors by four to seven years on average.
The residents of the San Blas islands, meanwhile, off the coast of Panama, very rarely suffer from high blood pressure and heart disease. Indeed, research shows that their rate of heart disease is only nine per 100,000 people, compared to 83 per 100,000 among nearby mainland Panamanians.
What makes these groups so fortunate? A growing body of findings suggests that diet is one of the important contributors to longevity and a healthy life. WebMD examined the research and talked to the experts. Here’s what’s on the menu of people who enjoy long and healthy lives.
Foods for a Healthy Heart
Most of us know to go easy on saturated fat, the kind found in meat and high-fat dairy products. Saturated fats have been shown to raise blood cholesterol levels into the danger zone. Just as important is what you should be eating. For heart health and longevity, you should eat:
Plenty of fruits and vegetables: Plant-based foods are abundant in fiber and many vitamins and minerals. Packed with nutrients, they’re also relatively low in calories. Studies consistently show that diets plentiful in fruits and vegetables help people maintain a healthy weight and protect against cardiovascular disease.
Whole grains: Like fruits and vegetables, whole grains pack a lot of nutrition into a low-calorie package. Grains like oats and barley are also rich in a long list of disease-fighting compounds.
In findings from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis published in 2009, researchers at the University of Texas Health Sciences Center in Houston reported that participants whose diets included plenty of whole grains and fruit cut their heart disease risk by almost half compared to those whose diets favored meat and fatty foods. Findings from more than 161,000 nurses enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Study also show that whole grains protect against type 2 diabetes, a disease that in turn increases the danger of heart disease.
Nuts: For too long, nuts were banished from the list of healthy foods because they’re high in fat. They are. But the fat they contain is mostly unsaturated, which protects against heart disease.
Dark chocolate: Dark chocolate? That’s right. Researchers now think that high blood pressure and heart disease are exceedingly rare among residents of the San Blas islands because they eat chocolate, and lots of it. Components in dark chocolate called polyphenols are believed to lower blood pressure and improve the flexibility of blood vessels. In a 2008 study, researchers at the University of Aquila gave volunteers with hypertension 100 grams of dark chocolate daily. After 15 days, their blood pressure readings were significantly lower and their insulin sensitivity had improved.Foods for a Vital Brain
The basic advice is simple: What’s good for your heart and blood vessels is also good for your brain. That means eating a diet centered on fruits and vegetables, with plenty of unsaturated oils such as olive oil, and plenty of whole grains. Foods that may add extra protection include:
Blueberries and other antioxidant-rich fruits: Ongoing research at the Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University suggests that foods especially high in antioxidants, including blueberries, grape juice, and walnuts, protect against age-related changes in the brain that lead to memory loss and even dementia. Dark green leafy vegetables: Collard greens, spinach, and broccoli are good sources of calcium.
Tofu: Look for brands made with calcium sulfate, which contain the highest levels of calcium. A half-cup contains about 250 milligrams of calcium. (Adult women should consume about 1500 milligrams a day, according to Heaney.)
Unfortunately, getting enough vitamin D turns out to be trickier than getting enough calcium. Although many foods are fortified with vitamin D, diet alone isn’t able to provide enough. Our skin converts sunlight to vitamin D; but with age, that process becomes less efficient. (During the winter months in most parts of the United States, the sun is too weak to generate vitamin D production.)
While experts continue to debate the optimal levels of vitamin D, Heaney recommends taking 1,000 to 2,000 international units (IU) a day in supplement form. Boosting vitamin D is particularly important as you get older, he points out, since the skin becomes less efficient at generating this crucial nutrient from sunlight.
Beyond Nutrients: The Joy of Eating
A diet abundant in nutrients is obviously important to longevity. So is enjoying what you eat-- and especially finding joy in sitting down to meals with family and friends.
Studies of centenarians the world over suggest that social connections and finding meaning in life are both crucial to longevity. The long-lived people of Okinawa say one reason they enjoy long and healthy lives is something they call ikigai, or “finding your reason to live.”
Fish: High in omega-3 fats, fish and shellfish have been shown to protect against irregular heart rhythms than can lead to heart failure. New evidence suggests that in addition to heart protection, the fatty acids such as DHA and EPA found in fish oil (and ALA found in flaxseed) may offer a defense against depression and age-related memory loss.
Low-salt foods: Researchers have known for years that less salt in the diet means lower blood pressure. Now new evidence suggests that keeping blood pressure down may also protect brain cells and decrease the risk of age-related memory loss and even dementia.
“High blood pressure can damage the vasculature that supplies the brain with oxygen and nutrients,” explains Tufts University neuroscientist Aron Troen, PhD. That may explain why people with chronic hypertension seem to be at higher risk of developing age-related cognitive impairments.
Coffee: A growing number of studies suggest that coffee has several surprising health benefits. Along with potentially lowering the risk of type 2 diabetes, consumption of coffee may reduce the risk of age-related mental decline.
The latest evidence, from a Finish study of 1,409 volunteers published in the Journal of Alzheimers Disease in 2009, found that people who regularly drank coffee during their middle-aged years were significantly less likely to suffer dementia and Alzheimer’s later in life. Those who drank three to five cups daily had a 65% reduction in risk.
Foods for Strong Bones
Bone loss and osteoporosis are among the leading reasons for disability in later life. And once seniors become disabled, their health often declines in many other ways. Although some bone loss is inevitable as we age, eating foods rich in calcium and vitamin D can slow the process and prevent disabling fractures. Among the top choices:
Low-fat dairy products: “The body needs vitamin D in order to absorb calcium,” says Robert P Heaney, MD, professor of medicine at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., and a leading expert on osteoporosis. “But adequate levels of protein are also necessary to keep bones strong.” For that reason, he argues, dairy products like milk and yogurt are the best sources of calcium because they contain the full array of nutrients needed for healthy bones.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Welcome

Who are we?
WAECA stands for Warakamb Adventist Elite & Clergymen's Association. Warakamb Valley is a remote area located between the two Provinces of Enga and Southern Highlands in Papua New Guinea (PNG) Highlands. PNG is located just to the north of Australia. Our elites are involved in all fields, Ministerial, Medical, nursing, building, journalism, dentistry, mining and engineering and others. We have come together as brothers to serve a common need, to improve the lifes of our people; not only spiritually, but also physically and socially and economically. We are young christians helping out to the rural folk who have no means to talk for themselves. We speak out on issues affecting the valley, and remote PNG as a whole. We want to take a lead in important issues affecting our people and country. We are not a plotical group. We are non government and not for profit. See our postings on a wide range of issues, such as HIV AIDS, climate change, self reliance, law and order etc; in the remote PNG context. Also visit our website at http://www.waeca.com
Sunday, February 7, 2010
WAECA students make progress.
This year will see more WAECA students in tertiary schools. Newman Sop will do Law at UPNG this year. Micah Malen will do second year medicine and Nickie Dick has been accepted to do Aircraft engineering with civil aviation.
Three of our PAU students are doing well. Rosie and Sam will be doing thrid year Bachelor of Nursing and Sharon Dick is doing second year.
Joe kep is now during his residency as a maxillo dento - facial surgeon in Goroka base. We wish them all the best, and may God bless you.
Three of our PAU students are doing well. Rosie and Sam will be doing thrid year Bachelor of Nursing and Sharon Dick is doing second year.
Joe kep is now during his residency as a maxillo dento - facial surgeon in Goroka base. We wish them all the best, and may God bless you.
New Health centre for Warakamb
The new Warakamb health centre building is progressing well again after disruptions from the last Kandep bi election.
Hopefully, it will be completed by the end of this year. Let us hope that in the future, one of the churches most like the SDA church will be able to run it. The churches do a better job in the rural areas.
Hopefully, it will be completed by the end of this year. Let us hope that in the future, one of the churches most like the SDA church will be able to run it. The churches do a better job in the rural areas.
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