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At-risk ‘zero dose children’ get vaccines as Somalia drought woes mount

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As drought stretches into a sixth season, WHO outreach teams target unvaccinated children reaching displacement camps where measles and pneumonia are rife.

3 April 2023 – Baidoa, Somalia – Somali farmer Fadumo Mohamed Ibrahim’s crops failed in the drought and she set out on foot for help.

Twenty-five days later, she and her daughter Khaliye stumbled into a settlement in the outskirts of Baidoa, a city in central Somalia, sick and exhausted.

“There is no health care in my village, my children have never been vaccinated,” the 30-year-old says.

 Picture1Fadumo Mohamed and her daughter Khaliye pictured at Raama Cadey camp for internally displaced people in Baidoa, Somalia, 22 March 2023. Khaliye, who has never received a vaccine, was vaccinated against measles, polio and pneumonia by an outreach team supported by WHO. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

Arriving at the crowded settlement of fragile plastic-roofed shelters, the camp leader and health outreach workers took her to a vaccination team in an early step to safeguard their health.

“We were told by householders to get a vaccine. They told us it was important,” she adds.

 Picture2Fadumo Mohamed pictured at Raama Cadey camp for internally displaced people in Baidoa, Somalia, 22 March 2023. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

So-called ‘zero dose children’, those like Khaliye who have never received immunization of any kind, account for around half of vaccine-preventable deaths around the world.

New arrivals at Raama Cadey camp, which is home to 342 displaced families, are recorded by the camp leader Abdulkadir Abdinur Adan. He identifies their needs and reports them to a community outreach health team supported by the World Health Organization.

At a makeshift vaccination centre, with patio furniture set up in a stick-built shelter open to the elements, health workers don facemasks and rubber gloves, and vaccinate children against measles, polio, and pneumonia – often deadly diseases present in the growing settlements that ring the city.

A day after Khaliye received the shots, Fadumo hugs her tightly as she sits on the floor of a hut built at the crowded settlement, brushing off flies. “When we walked to Baidoa, the children were sick … It’s important to keep my children safe,” she says.

 Picture3Khaliye pictured at Raama Cadey camp for internally displaced people in Baidoa, Somalia, 22 March 2023. Khaliye, who has never received a vaccine, was vaccinated against measles, polio and pneumonia by an outreach team supported by WHO. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

Decades of conflict and 5 consecutive seasons of drought have left 8.3 million Somalis – around half the population – in need of protection and assistance. Repeated crop failures and worsening food insecurity have put more than 1.8 million under 5s at risk of severe malnutrition and related health complications.

The drought-ravaged rural area surrounding the city of Baidoa, once dubbed the “breadbasket of Somalia,” is emptying out after years of crop failures. The number of displaced people has nearly doubled in Baidoa to 660 000 in 2022, from 350 000 in 2018, with hundreds of people arriving at dozens of camps ringing the city each day.

“They have lost their livelihoods and have no source of income at all,” says Abdulkadir Abdinur Adan. “Every day they are 3 to 5 new households arriving on foot or in vehicles,” he adds.

Women, children and men crowd into single-roomed shelters made from thorn trees and roofed with cloth and plastic sheeting, which dot the mud and rock-strewn terrain, 2 or 3 paces apart. Residents have limited access to clean water for cooking or washing, and share just 10 latrines between them. One recent day, all were shuttered with padlocks.

“If you are in an IDP camp where people are living in crowded settings with limited or compromised access to water, sanitation and health services, you are more exposed to diseases that you would be in a village, that’s for sure,” says Joaquin Baruch, an epidemiologist with WHO during a recent visit to the camp to meet with community leaders and outreach health teams.

“Having outreach workers conducting immunization campaigns, it’s a huge investment in health … Without it, you spend your whole time doing outbreak control. It saves many lives,” he adds.

The already elevated risk from infectious diseases in the camp setting are further exacerbated by the poor health of families and children who frequently reach displacement camps around the city on foot, dehydrated and underweight.

“They really are more at risk from disease because of malnutrition,” Baruch says. “Most of the deaths are actually caused by a weakening of the immune system. If you are in a poor state, you are more susceptible to diseases,” he adds.

Nationwide, WHO has vaccinated more than 3.2 million children in recent months for measles, around 3 million have been treated with vitamin A and deworming tablets, and nearly one million in a cholera vaccination drive.

The importance of immunization has become clear to mother-of-4 Barwago Isgowe Ibrahim, who arrived at Raama Cadey 3 weeks earlier.

 Picture4Barwago Isgowe Ibrahim and her son Abdullahi Dero Ali pictured at Raama Cadey camp for internally displaced people in Baidoa, Somalia, 22 March 2023. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

She explains that she previously lost a son, aged 2, to illness in her home village, which had no health centre or access to medical treatment.

She ensured that her 3 surviving children, all aged under 5, got immunized.

“There are so many diseases here, it’s important to get vaccinated,” she says, clutching her surviving son Abdullahi Dero Ali to her chest. 

Picture5Health workers at a makeshift vaccination centre at Raama Cadey camp for internally displaced people in Baidoa, Somalia, 22 March 2023. Supported by WHO, the teams vaccinate so-called ‘zero dose’ children against measles, polio, and pneumonia – often deadly diseases present in the growing settlements that ring the city. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

The 2-year-old has a fever and is sweating and listless, but she has some confidence that he will recover.

“Vaccines will protect him,” she says.

About two thirds of these zero dose children live in marginalized communities and last year, through community outreach centres and an accelerated campaign, WHO identified and vaccinated nearly 85 000 zero-dose children in the country.

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Health workers don rubber gloves at a makeshift vaccination centre at Raama Cadey camp for internally displaced people in Baidoa, Somalia, 22 March 2023. Supported by WHO, the teams vaccinate children against measles, polio, and pneumonia – often deadly diseases present in the growing settlements that ring the city. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

By reaching out to these zero-dose children, WHO is giving them not only a new life and new hope for the future, but reaching the missed communities they are a part of. This way the immunization gaps and vaccine inequity that is seen in the country will be addressed.

Picture7A cold box containing vaccines pictured at during an immunication drive, 22 March 2023. The camp is home to 342 displaced families, including hundreds of ‘zero dose’ children who have never received vaccines. Credit: Abdulkadir Zubeyr

WHO helps Somalia establish a functional medical supply chain as part of resilience-building for the health system

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Cover-Pic-Airport-ArrivalsAir transportation is the major means of transportation across the country to maintain a medical supply chain across Somalia. Credit: WHO Somalia

Mogadishu, 2 April 2023 – To ensure sustained and reliable health services in an extremely challenging environment, WHO has used innovation and creativity to help the Federal and State ministries of health establish an operational medical supply chain for serving the most vulnerable and disadvantaged populations across the country. 

WHO has managed to airlift, transport and stock over 1400 tonnes of medical commodities, worth around US$ 5 million during the past year to support essential health and nutrition care to the vulnerable population in the midst of extreme drought and food insecurity, which the country has been facing since November 2021. These supplies have been instrumental in providing basic health care and patient consultations to about 3.6 million people in the marginalized communities, protecting about 3.5 million children under 5 in access-constrained areas against various childhood diseases like polio, measles, cholera, malnutrition and helped administer various micronutrient supplements like vitamin A and deworming tablets to another one million children under 5. 

To keep the medical stocks handy to meet the emergency needs of the country, especially in the face of an ongoing pandemic and drought, WHO is maintaining contingent stocks in 3 strategically located warehouses in Mogadishu (2553 cubic metres), Hargeisa (1540 cubic metres) and Garowe (536 cubic metres). To bring services closer to the people, WHO is in the process of opening 3 additional warehouses in the cities of Dollow, Kismaiyo, and Baidoa to better serve the states of Jubaland and South West--most affected by the drought, cholera outbreaks and internally displaced persons (IDPs). While WHO continues to strengthen the health systems and improve access to health care for the people caught in the cycle of conflict and climatic shock, such as the drought in hard-to-reach areas, the Organization is supporting the Government to establish a strong supply chain system, which will be pivotal for sustainable and equitable recovery of the health system from the convergence of crisis the country is facing. At the same time, a strong and operationally functioning supply chain system will contribute to building resilience for achieving universal health coverage. To this end, WHO continues to ensure improved access to health care for the vulnerable populations through delivery of medical supplies close to the communities using its humanitarian response imperatives. It also works towards building a system that supports availability and equitable delivery and distribution of medicine/product at the right time, minimizing inventory wastage, maximizing patient care and coordinating with other parts of the chain to ensure that health care providers and health care seekers get the medications and treatments they need and where they need them.   

“Being a health professional and working in a resource-starved and geographically challenged health system in a conflict zone, WHO supplies are proving to be a lifeline for millions. Everyone wondered how a medical supply chain could work in Somalia, but I believe WHO has shown it to the world that if there is a resolve to serve humanity, obstacles can be turned into opportunities,” commented Dr Yusuf Omar Mohamed, Head of Pharmaceuticals & Supply Chain Section, Ministry of Health and Human Services, Federal Government of Somalia, while reflecting on WHO’s contribution is establishing the supply chain. 

Medical supplies procured and delivered by WHO include kits for testing inter emergency health, trauma care, malaria, tuberculosis, HIV-AIDs, cholera and measles besides having medicines for treatment of all these diseases, as well as personal protective equipment (PPEs), long lasting insecticidal nets to control malaria, oxygen concentrators, solar panels, electricity generators, and ambulances among others public health, IT and office materials. 

Cylinders-GalmudugOxygen cylinders procured and delivered to remote health facility in Galmudug. Credit: WHO/Somalia

Supply chain system

Due to security reasons and other operational challenges, WHO uses the seaports of both Somalia and neighbouring countries to import the majority of the required medical supplies. Procurement of medical supplies is triggered by programme staff via consultation with Health Cluster partners and the Federal and State ministries of health. The programme staff also develop a distribution plan to reach the health facilities at state, regional and district level to ensure procurements are accounted for and reach the target beneficiaries. 

A transparent and layered procurement system then swings into action to seek the best and suitable supplies from across the global suppliers within established timelines. A regular procurement may take up to 3 months but in case of emergencies like the October 2022 twin-blasts in Mogadishu, WHO expedited the process and within a week after the blast airlifted trauma kits worth over US$ 1 million from the International Humanitarian City in Dubai. 

Warehouse_StockMaintaining inventory of essential medical supplies throughout the year helped serve and save millions. Credit: WHO/Somalia

Distribution network

When medical supplies arrive in the WHO main warehouse in Mogadishu, they are either distributed directly to the districts from Mogadishu as per the agreed distribution plan, or sent to the designated states for storage and dissemination to the health facilities. Currently, the warehouse in Garowe is serving Puntland State while Hargeisa is serving Somaliland and the rest of the states are served directly from the main WHO warehouse in Mogadishu. 

Due to the security situation in the country, there is limited use of road transport, hence the majority of the medical supplies are moved by air from Mogadishu to the state warehouses where they are received by the state ministries of health for further distribution to the public health facilities. 

“What satisfies us is the fact that people express gratitude to WHO for bringing these critical medical supplies. It indeed is a big motivational factor for us to brave all the odds and maintain a steady stream of life-saving supplies,” said Operations Support and Logistics Officer for WHO Somalia, Harrison Kiambuthi. “In the process of doing our work,” he added that, “We are also building local capacities in this comparatively new concept of medical supply chain management to ensure sustainability of our efforts besides continuing to bring digitization of the warehouse stocks and its air and road movement.” 

WHO Somalia is grateful for the benevolence of donors like European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Office (ECHO), World Bank and our trusted fund streams like Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) and Contingency Fund for Emergency (CFE) for making this dream come true. These partners have helped WHO to ensure sustained provision of health services through 7 public health laboratories, 64 nutrition stabilization centres, 13 cholera treatment centres, 10 oral rehydration centres, 281 health facilities and numerous outreach teams including over 2000 community health workers.

Related links

ECHO and WHO deliver essential and life-saving medical supplies to meet emergency health needs of drought-affected communities 

WHO, the International Humanitarian City of Dubai and Government of United Arab Emirates extend life-saving support to twin-blast victims of Mogadishu 

 

 

 

New study finds that 43 000 “excess deaths” may have occurred in 2022 from the drought in Somalia

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Half of the drought-related deaths occurred among children under the age of 5

Mogadishu, 20 March 2023 – A new report released today by the Federal Ministry of Health & Human Services, WHO and UNICEF suggests that an estimated 43 000 excess deaths may have occurred in 2022 in Somalia due to the deepening drought, a figure higher than that of the first year of the 2017–2018 drought crisis. Half of these deaths may have occurred among children under the age of 5.

The findings of the report were released today by the Minister of Health of the Federal Government of Somalia, Dr Ali Hadji Adam Abubakar, in the presence of Mr Adam Abdelmoula, Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General and United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, Ms Wafaa Saeed, UNICEF Country Representative of Somalia and Dr Sk Md Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative for Somalia.

For the first time, a scenario-based forecast model was developed from the same study to enable anticipatory action and avert drought-related deaths. The forecast, spanning January to June 2023, estimates that 135 people might also die each day due to the crisis, with total deaths projected to fall between 18 100 and 34 200 during this period. These estimates suggest that, although famine has been averted for now, the crisis is far from over and is already more severe than the 20172018 drought crisis.

These figures are derived from a statistical model which estimated that the crude death rate increased across Somalia from 0.33 to 0.38 deaths per 10 000 person-days over the period January–December 2022; the rate in children younger than 5 years was nearly double these levels. For 2023, the crude death rate is forecasted to reach 0.42 deaths per 10 000 person-days by June 2023.

Commissioned by the UNICEF Regional Office and WHO Somalia country office and carried out by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Imperial College London, the study presents retrospective estimates of mortality across Somalia from January to December 2022. The highest death rates were estimated to have occurred in south-central Somalia, especially the areas around Bay, Bakool and Banadir regions, the current epicentre of the drought.

The study, the first in a planned series, received support from the Federal Ministry of Health & Human Services of the Federal Government of Somalia and the Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and was funded by the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office of the United Kingdom.

While releasing the findings of the report, Minister Dr Ali Hadji Adam Abubakar commented:

“We continue to be concerned about the level and scale of the public health impact of this deepening and protracted food crisis in Somalia. At the same time, we are optimistic that if we can sustain our ongoing and scaled-up health and nutrition actions and humanitarian response to save lives and protect the health of our vulnerable, we can push back the risk of famine forever, else those vulnerable and marginalized will pay the price of this crisis with their lives. We, therefore, urge all our partners and donors to continue to support the health sector in building a resilient health system that works for everyone and not for the few. Building a healthier and happier world for all Somalis remains at the heart of our government.”

WHO Representative Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, commenting on the study findings, said that:

“We are racing against time to prevent deaths and save lives that are avoidable. We have seen, deaths and diseases thrive when hunger and food crises prolong. We will see more people dying from disease than from hunger and malnutrition combined if we do not act now. The cost of our inaction will mean that children, women and other vulnerable people will pay with their lives while we hopelessly, helplessly, witness the tragedy unfold.”

Dr Malik added that:

“From the very beginning of this drought, WHO has clearly stated that the drought is a health crisis as much as it is a food and climate crisis. WHO’s main concern has been to prevent excess deaths directly or indirectly attributed to drought with a special focus on women and children under 5. As such, WHO has stepped up its life-saving integrated health interventions throughout 2022 and would continue to do so in 2023 to avert every preventable death in Somalia.”

“These results present a grim picture of the devastation brought on children and their families by the drought,” said UNICEF Representative Wafaa Saeed.

“We are saddened by these deaths, and we know there could have been many more deaths had humanitarian assistance not been scaled up to reach affected communities. We must continue to save lives by preventing and treating malnutrition, providing safe and clean water, improving access to life-saving health services, immunizing children against deadly diseases such as measles and providing critical protection services.”

Somalia is enduring five consecutive seasons of failed rains, the longest in recent memory, which has left 5 million people in acute food insecurity and nearly 2 million children at risk of malnutrition. The United Nations needs more than US$ 2.6 billion to meet the priority needs of 7.6 million people in 2023.

Note to Editors:

The current drought crisis in Somalia is unfolding against an already grim backdrop. With nearly half of the population (7.9 million) in need of humanitarian assistance, the situation is exacerbated by climate change-induced extreme weather, political instability, ethnic tensions and insecurity, which continue to worsen public health and nutrition concerns. Six consecutive failed rainy seasons have caused the drought, which coincides with rapidly increasing global food prices, intensification of insecurity in some regions and the socioeconomic aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. As with previous complex crises, it has been accompanied by large movements of internally displaced persons (IDPs) (3.5 million recorded by humanitarian actors). In the context of this latest crisis, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine was commissioned by WHO and UNICEF to produce both retrospective and forecasting estimates of overall and crisis-attributable excess mortality across Somalia and suggest action points.

A summary of the report can be downloaded here.

For additional information, please contact:

Ministry of Health and Human Services, Federal Republic of Somalia:

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UNICEF
Victor Chinyama
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+252 613 375 885

WHO:
Fouzia Bano
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Kyle De Freitas
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International Happiness Day - a mental health approach

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somalia-mother-sonMother and child wait to receive a vaccination at a camp for internally displaced persons in Mogadishu, Somalia. Credit: Ismail Taxta/ WHO.

Mogadishu, 20 March 2023 – Since 2013, the 20 March has been commemorated as the International Day of Happiness. The day provides an occasion to recognize and reflect on the importance of happiness in the lives of people around the world. Numerous studies show correlation between mental health, happiness and quality of life and yet, mental health is often neglected in health programming, particularly in fragile contexts like Somalia. Yet, it is in these contexts that mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) is particularly needed.

Having faced decades of conflict, displacement, climate shocks and extreme poverty, the incidence of mental health issues in Somalia is thought to be one of the highest, if not the highest, among low-income countries. With limited access to support services, populations in need of MHPSS and their families are likely to be caught up in a cycle of poverty, mental illness, social marginalization, stigma and general health issues, reducing both quality of life and life expectancy.

WHO is working with the Ministry of Health to expand access to MHPSS services, which is a crucial component of the Somalia Essential Package of Health Services (EPHS, 2020), and to promote coordination between actors through the Mental Health technical working group. In partnership with the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Ministry of Health, WHO also implemented the “Improving psychosocial support and mental health care for conflict-affected youth in Somalia: a socially inclusive integrated approach for peacebuilding” project with funding from the United Nations Peacebuilding Fund.

The project sought to establish links between mental health care and peacebuilding and contribute to building better social cohesion amongst communities by reducing harmful mental health impacts and negative coping behaviors including substance abuse. Research conducted by WHO in three districts as part of this project found that three quarters of participants in clinical and non-clinical settings were experiencing some sort of mental health issue while the prevalence of substance abuse issues and poor quality of life were also high. The research also found that there has been a positive relationship between those suffering from mental illness with substance abuse, meaning that those suffering from mental illness often resort to substance abuse as part of their coping mechanism. With a particular focus on young people, who make up three quarters of Somalia’s population and are well-positioned to contribute to the country’s transition from conflict to lasting peace, the project worked to strengthen institutional and community support for MHPSS for conflict-affect youth, while reducing stigma associated with mental health issues.

The project found that while improving mental health care services is essential to enabling young Somalis to contribute to their communities and actively engage in peacebuilding, it is not sufficient. Without access to employment and livelihoods opportunities and a sense of hope for the future, young people struggled to escape the pervasive cycle of mental heath and substance abuse issues.

Reflecting on the impact of the project on the International Day of Happiness, WHO Representative to Somalia and Head of Mission, Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik called for a holistic, multi-sectoral response, saying, “mental health and psychosocial support is essential to enabling people around the world to live happy and healthy lives. We know that health is a holistic state of well-being, not merely the absence of disease. While expanding access to mental health services as part of Somalia’s Essential Package of Health Services, we must link with other projects and initiatives to break the cycle of poverty, stigma and exclusion and ensure that those experiencing mental health issues have access to education, to livelihoods, to opportunities to engage with their communities and build a sense of hope for the future.”

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For additional information, please contact:

Kyle DeFreitas
WHO Somalia External Relations Lead
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Fouzia Bano
WHO Somalia Communications Officer
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Related links

For further information on WHO’s work on mental health, including in Somalia, please see:

World Mental Health Day 2021, Somalia: WHO EMRO | Making mental health care for all a reality in Somalia: United Nations and the Government join forces to scale up quality mental health services at all levels of care | News | Somalia site

Mental Health at WHO: Mental health (who.int)

“Every breath counts”: KSrelief and WHO join hands to prevent childhood deaths by increasing access to medical oxygen in Somalia

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every-breath-countsH.E. Eng. Ahmed Albaiz, Assistant-Supervisor General for Operations and Programmes at the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre (KSrelief), and Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, WHO Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, sign project contribution agreement

Riyadh, 14 March 2023 – H.E. Eng. Ahmed Albaiz, Assistant-Supervisor General for Operations and Programmes at the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre (KSrelief), and Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, WHO Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, signed a project contribution agreement during the 3rd Riyadh International Humanitarian Forum from 20 to 21 February 2023, entitled “Every breath counts: Reducing childhood pneumonia by increasing access to medical oxygen in the fragile humanitarian setting of Somalia.”

This landmark moment highlights the strong humanitarian partnership between KSrelief and WHO to better ensure health for all in vulnerable communities and comes at a particularly important time when Somalia is suffering from one of the worst droughts in its recent history, which has adversely affected 7.8 million people, including 1.1 million who have been displaced (on top of 2.5 million already previously displaced) in search of food, water and health care.

Child mortality, especially infant and under-5 death rates in Somalia are among the highest in the world. Any child born in Somalia today is 16.5 times more likely to die before the age of 5, than a child from any other country. Currently, the under-5 mortality rate in Somalia is 117 per 1 000 live births (higher than the sub-Saharan average of 76 deaths per 1000 per live births), whereby approximately 21% of these deaths among children under 5 are attributed to pneumonia, while 18–20% are attributed to diarrhoeal disease.

In response, this vital project aims to reduce the alarmingly high rates of childhood pneumonia- and diarrhoeal-related deaths in Somalia. The allocated resources from KSrelief will help WHO to undertake cost-effective and evidence-informed life-saving interventions in the target districts with a strong focus on strengthening community-based preventive care, as well as promotive and curative care for the treatment of sick children with signs of childhood pneumonia and diarrhoeal disease. The project will also contribute to strengthening primary health care, as well as maternity and child health centres and district hospitals (referral hospitals) by equipping them with solar-powered oxygen delivery system for improving access to medical oxygen for children, pregnant women and other vulnerable populations seeking health care in these public health facilities. 

As a result of these activities WHO anticipates that morbidity and mortality among children under 5 attributed to pneumonia will be reduced by 10% in the target districts, while an estimated 230 000 children under 5 and over 3.3 million people will benefit from integrated health care and other priority interventions of this project.  Thus, the goal and objectives of this project remain aligned with the Government’s overarching vision of achieving universal health coverage (UHC) through the implementation of its Essential Package of Health Services 2020, which focuses on leveraging community and primary levels of care to achieve Health for All by All.

Recognizing KSrelief’s contributing to saving the lives of Somali children, Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, WHO’s Regional Director, said, “Contrary to what the situation in Somalia looks like, WHO has shown that community-based outreach programmes involving visits by community health workers to individual households assists greatly in identifying and referring children suffering from any illness to a health facility, including for suspected pneumonia or severe diarrhoea. As we continue pushing forward and materializing our regional vision: health for all by all, we strongly believe that continuing to integrate such community interventions to primary level care can be a game changer, especially when facilities also have access to medical oxygen and deliver integrated health care. On behalf of the WHO’s Regional Office and Country Office in Somalia, I express our sincere thanks and gratitude to KSrelief for this life-saving support to Somalia.”

Note to editors

Under the patronage of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, His Royal Highness King Salman bin Abdulaziz, KSrelief organizes the Riyadh International Humanitarian Forum every 2 years in Saudi Arabia, bringing together humanitarian leaders, international partners, development practitioners, researchers, and others to promote dialogue on legislative, informational, and logistical mechanisms for delivering humanitarian aid to those most in need. The forum also addresses humanitarian challenges and seeks to identify innovative practical solutions in accordance with international humanitarian principles and standards, including the Sustainable Development Goals.

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For additional information, please contact:

Kyle DeFreitas
WHO Somalia External Relations Lead
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Fouzia Bano
WHO Chief of Staff ai, Communications Officer
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Related links

WHO supports nationwide integrated immunization campaign in the midst of drought: 2.61 million children vaccinated against measles and polio

Drought-survivors arrive at internally displaced person camps to "live another day" 

 

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