The Australia-Indonesia Collaboration Storybook, Creative Strategies to Reduce Parasite Infections in School Children
The Storybook of the Australia-Indonesia Collaboration, Creative Strategies to Reduce Parasite Infections in School Children
Data
shows that more than a third of Indonesian children aged 3-15 years can
be categorized as stunting (36.8% in 2017). Parasitic infection is one
of the main causes, where some areas in Bali are classified as having a
moderate level of infection that affects about 24% of school children.
The Australia-Indonesia collaboration, through the Australian Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade, in collaboration with Udayana University,
Griffiths University and the Australian National University (ANU), has
funded an activity designed to reduce parasitic infections among
students and to increase their growth, and ability to and their
cognitive capacity to concentrate and get the most out of their studies.
Ni Made Utami Dwipayanti, Ph.D, a lecturer at the Undergraduate Public
Health Study Program and also a researcher at the Center for Public
Health Innovation (CPHI), Faculty of Medicine, Udayana University
coordinated this activity and has produced an interesting health
education storybook, designed for students, teachers, and families at
home, to learn more about preventing parasitic infections and improving
hygiene. The storybooks were handed over to representatives from the
Bali Provincial Health Office, Education, Community Empowerment and
Higher Education Offices in Bali at the Australian Consulate-General in
Bali on Monday, 12 September 2022.
In his remarks, Australian
Consul General in Bali, Ms Anthea Griffin said, "Bali is at the heart of
the people-to-people relations of our two countries, and the
cooperation between the University in Australia and Udayana University
in Bali strengthens the main pillars of our bilateral relationship,
including trade, investment, cooperation. development, education and
training, and research and innovation."
Present at this activity
Prof. Don Stewart, of Griffith University, and Prof. Darren Gray from
ANU who has been working with Indonesia for almost 10 years to reduce
'open defecation' and improve sanitation and hygiene in rural
communities. The handover of this book was also attended by the Deputy
Dean for Academic Affairs and Planning, FK Unud, Dr. dr. I Gede Eka
Wiratnaya, Sp.OT(K), Coordinator of the Undergraduate Public Health
Study Program, dr. Putu Ayu Swandewi Astuti, MPH, Ph.D, Coordinator of
the CPHI Unit, Prof. dr. Pande Putu Januraga, M.Kes, Dr.PH, and
researchers from the CPHI Unit FK Unud
Source : fk.unud.ac.id
MEDICAL FACULTY