World Health Organization
منظمة الصحة العالمية
Organisation mondiale de la Santé

Emergency risk and crisis management

طباعة

Displaced Syrian children posing with WHO staff in informal tented settlementThird polio vaccination round March 2014 Bekaa informal tented settlementAs of March 2014, it has been almost three years since the onset of the Syrian crisis. Since March 2012 military escalation in Syria has been unprecedented, causing more than 4 million Syrians to flee the violence inside Syria, and more than 2 million to be displaced outside Syria. Lebanon hosts the greatest number of displaced Syrians in the Region, the officially registered number exceeds 1 million whereas unofficial numbers suggest a count of over 2 million. The WHO country office in Lebanon has been greatly involved in ensuring that displaced Syrians in Lebanon have access to primary and secondary health care services, that communicable disease are prevented and monitored, and that the population at large is prepared for bigger challenges in health.

The main objectives of the WHO Lebanon country office support are to:

In consequence, the WHO country team is participating in all monthly interagency coordination meetings, where briefings on the situation of the Syrian crisis at country and regional levels are provided from and to UN heads of agencies. During these meetings main issues pertaining to the UN response to the Syrian crisis in Lebanon are also discussed as well as issues of public health importance and the engagement of the Government in strategy and response decisions.

WHO has also focused its support to the primary health careservices provided to the displaced  in terms of training and capacity-building, as well as to ensure gap filling for critical health issues; the achievements so far include:

In the context of chemical nuclear and biological hazards, WHO organized, in coordination with the Ministry of Public Health and in collaboration with the Syndicate of Hospitals, a set of 11 workshops on management of exposure to these hazards, with focus on the medical and public health aspects. The training reached 189 health staff from public and private hospitals, as well as public health staff from the Qada health offices, the armed forces, the Ministries of interior, industry and environment. The training module was prepared by the WHO country office team, based on WHO reference material adapted to the Lebanese health system; the training included interactive sessions, with case studies and hands on practical session on the use of personal protective equipment.

WHO jointly with UNICEF has conducted a vaccination outreach community-based intervention, with measles and polio vaccines; vaccination activities focused on areas with high concentration of displaced Syrians reaching a total of 250 000 children less than 5 years, around 30% of them are displaced Syrians.

WHO provided 10 000 doses of antimonials to provide treatment for the cutaneous leishmaniasis reported among DS; recommendations for vector control were also provided to the Ministry and the Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) working group. Leishmania clinics have been established by the MOPH in 11 public hospitals, with the support of WHO for necessary medical supplies.

WHO will keep focusing its interventions based on the below strategic objectives:

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Photo credits: Pier Paolo Balladelli, MD, Emergency Support Team WHO Regional Syria Crisis Coordinator