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Singapore Committee of the World Organisation for Early Children Education; Singapore Corporation of Rehabilitative Enterprises; Singapore Council of Women's Organisations; Singapore Dental Health Foundation; Singapore Disability Sports Council; Singapore General Hospital, Medical Social Service; Singapore Gujarati Society; Singapore Heart ...
On 6 December 2020, Tambyah received a Red Ribbon Award by Action for AIDS Singapore for his contributions to HIV-related causes. [13] On 5 October 2021, Tambyah was recognised as one of the four eminent senior clinicians to receive the Distinguished Senior Clinician Award as conferred by the Ministry of Health in Singapore. [14]
Yearmail Name Country 2009 Infectious Diseases, AIDS and Clinical Immunology Research Center [3] [4] [5] Georgia 2010 Action for Aids (AfA) [6] Singapore 2011 Clodomiro Picado Research Institute [7] [8]
When she returned to Singapore she established the country's first HIV programme and patient care centre. [4] Her first frontline experience with infectious diseases were when the Nipah virus infected Singapore in 1999. [4] In 2002, Leo was made a Senior Consultant in the National Centre for Infectious Diseases. [3]
The first publicly identified AIDS victim in Singapore. Paddy Chew ( simplified Chinese : 周丰林 ; traditional Chinese : 周豐林 ; pinyin : Zhōu Fēng Lín ; 29 March 1960 – 21 August 1999) was the first Singaporean person with HIV/AIDS to come out to the general public.
Previously, the 3 teens infected between 2000 and 2002 had been heterosexual. In 2005, the lone 17-year-old student who had so far tested positive for HIV was also gay. He was presumably infected by his older partner who pressured him into having unprotected sex, according to Action for AIDS programme director Roger Winder. [38]
Movement for the Intellectually Disabled of Singapore [23] Association for Persons with Special Needs [24] Metta School [25] Grace Orchard School [26] SUN-DAC [27]
The National Centre for Infectious Diseases (Abbreviation: NCID; Malay: Pusat Nasional bagi Penyakit Berjangkit; Tamil: தேசிய தொற்றுநோய் மையம்; Chinese: 国家传染病中心), previously known as the Communicable Disease Centre (Abbreviation: CDC), is a national public health institute under the Ministry of Health of Singapore.