From Radio Songs to Modern Policy: Health as the Main Hope




By Dr Zeyar Win


HEALTH is more than the absence of disease. It means complete phys­ical, mental, and social well being. Good health strengthens learning capacity, increases productivity, and supports social stability and peace. A healthy person can study, work, and contribute to family prosperity and national progress. In this way, health is the basic foun­dation of development.


In the 1980s, Myanmar so­ciety was still simple and calm compared to today’s fast chang­ing world. At that time, radio was the most influential medium, and nearly every household owned one. Among the programs broadcast by Myanmar Radio was a song titled “အဓိကမျှော်တွေကျန်းမာရေး” written by Thein Tan (Myanmar Pyi) and Yankin Aung Myint Than, sung by Than Than Nwe, the song carried lyrics such as: “အာရေျံ ၊ပရမံ ၊လာ ဘံ ဆိုစကား ဒို့များ သိထားကြပါသည်၊ လု ပ် အားကိ ုယ် စီ ၊ူ ညီ ပေးဖ ို့ဒိ ု့များကိ ုယ် စီ ကျန် းမာဖိ ု့လိ ုသည် ၊ကျန် းမာမ ှအလု ပ်လု ပ် နိုင်မည်၊ အဖိုးမဖြတ်နိုင်ပါသည်၊ စိ်မှာ တွေကျန်းမာရေးသည် အဓိကရေး ဖြစ်သည်၊ ဒို့ယုံကြည်” It’s simple yet modern melody made it popular across the country.


This was more than just en­tertainment. It was a public health campaign reminding citizens that healthy children grow into healthy workers, and that a strong, healthy society becomes the strength of the nation. Other songs promoted healthy habits, such as “စောစောအိပ် လို့ စေစောထလို့ စေစောလမ်းလျှောက် ကြပါစို့”. These cultural messages encouraged ordinary people to adopt healthier lifestyles, show­ing how media could effectively support public health.


When individuals live long and healthy lives, families spend less on medical treatment, and societies reduce their healthcare burden. For the nation, a strong workforce ensures continuous growth in agriculture, industry, and technology. Prevention in health is especially important. As the saying goes, “Prevention is better than cure.” Preventing disease is more effective and less costly than treating it after it oc­curs.


Basic measures for good health include balanced nutrition, eating more fruits and vegetables, reducing excess fat, salt, and sug­ar, regular physical activity, ade­quate sleep, stress management, avoiding tobacco, alcohol, and drugs, vaccination, and regular health check ups. Health educa­tion is vital. When people under­stand disease risks and prevention methods, illness rates decline. Pri­oritizing hygiene, vaccination, and preventive care reduces the loss of human resources nationwide.




History shows that hu­manity has fought not only political wars but also invis­ible battles against disease. Epidemics have destroyed empires and reshaped soci­eties. The Plague of Justin­ian in the 6th century killed nearly half the population of the Byzantine Empire, weakening its military and hastening its decline. The Black Death in the 14th century wiped out more than a third of Europe’s population, collapsing the feudal system. In modern times, the Spanish Flu of 1918 killed over 50 million people worldwide, delay­ing post war recovery for years.


These lessons remain relevant today. The recent COVID-19 pandemic re­vealed that even power­ful nations with advanced weapons struggled when their health systems were weak. Lockdowns disrupt­ed economies and daily life, proving that national se­curity depends not only on military strength but also on resilient public health systems and informed cit­izens.


In today’s world, health challenges extend beyond traditional diseas­es. Climate change, envi­ronmental degradation, food insecurity, and pop­ulation density all affect health. These issues are intertwined with politics, economics, and society, creating a broad “health panorama”. Addressing them requires cooperation across sectors and long term planning.


Myanmar’s new gov­ernment recognizes that sustainable development depends on human re­sources. It plans to focus on education and health. In the health sector, the priority is expanding Uni­versal Health Coverage (UHC) so that all citizens, regardless of income, can access basic healthcare free or at low cost. Efforts include raising health awareness, strengthening disease prevention, and addressing both infectious diseases and non commu­nicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease.


Digital media will be used to spread accurate health information and counter misinformation. By sharing reliable, science based knowledge, the gov­ernment aims to empower citizens to make healthier choices. Vaccination pro­grams, preventive cam­paigns, and community participation will be inten­sified to build a healthier population.

Ultimately, health is not created by govern­ments and healthcare workers alone. It is a shared responsibility of every citizen, beginning in families and communities. Reviving the spirit of mutu­al support from the past, combined with modern medical technology, can en­sure long and healthy lives for all. The old radio song “အဓိကမျှော်ွေး ကျန်းေး” still carries meaning today: health is the foundation of education, work, prosperity, and national strength.

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