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Protecting children in Kismayo from measles: funding from anticipatory action framework proves impactful

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explaining-benefits-of-vaccinationHealth teams explain the benefits of vaccination to a mother in Kismayo, October 2020

19 November 2020 – In Kaamjiron village in Kismayo, Jubaland State, a young farmer and mother of 8, Khadijo Mohamed solemnly reflects about her children’s health. Khadijo has already lost 2 children to measles, and now a third, their one-year-old son Abdi has the same symptoms her other 2 children did – a cough, fever and rash.

“I rushed my child to the hospital because I know the signs and symptoms of this disease. I saw this happen in 2013 to 2 of my children and now, I want to protect my son,” says Khadijo.

She explains there are limited health services in her village, which proves to be difficult for families living in Kismayo. Despite this, there are stakeholders monitoring and responding to the situation.

Outbreak of measles in Jubaland: moving fast and first

Between the epidemiological weeks of 15 and 23 in 2020, the state surveillance data gathered by the Early Warning and Alert Response Network (EWARN) detected a large number of suspected measles cases in Jubaland State. This increase in number triggered a field investigation by the World Health Organization (WHO) during the first week of July. The outbreak was laboratory-confirmed following the detection of the measles IgM by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).

Somalia responds swiftly to measles outbreak in Jubaland State

Offering children health services in hard-to-reach locations

Following the confirmation of the outbreak, a series of coordination meetings were held, microplans were developed and using the surveillance data, a plan for organizing a mass measles campaign was developed, targeting 59 642 children from 6 months to 5 years of age in Kismayo district.

To ensure Somali children in Kismayo, a hotspot for measles, have access to immunization services to stop the spread of measles, the Federal Ministry of Health and Human Services (MOH) and State Ministry of Health of Jubaland have worked together to coordinate the outbreak response activities. They have worked in collaboration with WHO and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to offer outreach campaigns delivering measles vaccinations to children from 2000 outreach/vaccination posts.

From 7 to 11 October 2020, they partnered again to conduct a measles campaign in Kismayo, where more than 56 500 (95%) out of the targeted 59 642 children received measles vaccines and vitamin A capsules. During this campaign, 176 vaccination teams were deployed to provide measles vaccines and vitamin A capsules to children aged between 6 months and 5 years, and deworming tablets to children above 1 year of age. The teams also mobilized the community for vaccination, spreading key messages about the benefits of vaccination and disease prevention.

While at work during the campaign, health workers maintained physical distance, washed hands as often as they could, and wore face masks in efforts to protect themselves and others from spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

The campaign was supervised by 46 team supervisors, including staff from the Ministry of Health, WHO and UNICEF, to ensure every child possible received vaccines and that the campaign was conducted to the expected health standards.

A total of 441 cases of measles were reported from June to October 2020 during this measles outbreak. 39 cases tested positive for measles so far. Following the mass immunization campaign, cases have started to decline. 

child-receives-measles-vaccinationA child looks on as he receives a measles vaccine, Kismayo, October 2020

Following up with missed children

Health teams continue to search for measles cases and children who had missed the measles vaccine. Those who have missed the vaccines during the mass campaign are tracked regularly and are receiving an extra dose of measles vaccine irrespective of their previous vaccination status. 

Routine immunization in Jubaland State: historically low with pockets of inaccessibility rendering immunization coverage far from expected 

Historically, routine immunization coverage has remained low in Jubaland State. During 2019, the routine immunization coverage of Penta 1 was 71%; Penta 3 and IPV were 51%; and measles coverage was only 58% in this state.

2 districts (Hagar and Jamame) out of 5 in Lower Juba region are inaccessible, with no health/immunization services. In the accessible districts, there are some inaccessible villages and pockets where health care workers have only partial access to these areas.

Caregivers need to keep track of vaccines received

In Gulwade village in Kismayo, Maryan Abdi has a 3-year-old daughter who was recently diagnosed with measles. She explains that although her 6 children have received vaccines before, she isn’t sure if they received measles vaccines at all.

“It is important for parents to be informed of the vaccination schedule and its usefulness in protecting their children’s lives. We should also use innovative solutions in such challenging settings to keep track of those who have been vaccinated and children who are missing out. Children should not be denied access to vaccines whatever the operating challenges could be. This is the best way to protect them from preventable diseases,” says Dr Mamunur Malik, WHO Somalia Representative. “This matters for every Somali child, but even more so for the vulnerable ones living in difficult-to-reach locations.”

Meanwhile, Khadijo asks to share a key message with other Somali mothers and fathers: to avoid what she went through in life, by ensuring all children receive vaccines and seek timely treatment when they are sick.

New laboratory set up for measles confirmation in Kismayo General Hospital

In response to the surge in measles cases in the recent past, WHO provided support to the State Ministry of Health of Jubaland to establish a measles testing laboratory in the Kismayo General Hospital. The laboratory is equipped with the supplies required and an ELISA machine. Around 23 health workers were trained in case management and 3 laboratory personnel were trained to test for measles cases.

Note to editors:

The measles campaign was conducted in Kismayo in October 2020 with the generous financial support from the United Nations (UN) Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) Anticipatory Funding.

Life-saving disease prevention and mitigation efforts continue in Somalia under anticipatory action framework

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Health workers gaining skills at a training in infection prevention and control, in Jubaland StateHealth workers gaining skills at a training in infection prevention and control, in Jubaland State

Every year, the rains gift Somali communities with much-needed water for their animals and agricultural activities. However, in many riverine areas in the south and central States, intense rains result in the Juba and Shabelle rivers overflowing. This causes floods, which destroy homes and roads among other assets and infrastructure, and exacerbate the spread of water-borne and vector-borne diseases, such as cholera and malaria.

During the first half of this year, flooding from the Gu rains affected around 919 000 people, 412 000 of whom were forced to flee their homes, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) further state that more than 600 000 people were newly displaced by flooding in 2020. Additional rains and Hagaa flash floods recurring in the second half of the year added to this toll.

In order to prevent disease outbreaks and help affected communities in a quick and effective manner, the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) of the United Nations (UN) provided key support to the World Health Organization (WHO), and other UN agencies, to roll out a three-month project, titled the ‘Anticipatory Action Plan’ in 12 pre-identified districts. This project aimed to prevent the risks of preventable morbidity associated with flooding; strengthen early warning and rapid response to public health emergencies; and enhance the capacity of health care workers to respond to health emergencies.

Training sessions that support health workers

So far, since July 2020, 709 persons, including 219 women, received training in seven different topics. In September, 54-year-old Mohamed Olad Mohamoud, who runs the Yaka Health Centre in Yaka village of Qardho district, participated in a training run by WHO and funded by CERF. During the training, health professionals who work with the Federal Government and Puntland State, like Mohamed, learnt about communicable diseases and priority diseases that form part of the early warning alert and response network system (EWARN). They were shown how to report alerts of notifiable diseases, and informed about alert thresholds of priority diseases and surveillance performance indicators, such as registration. They also learnt about biological samples collection, packaging and shipment; how to analyze data and monitor trends of diseases; how to respond when there is a disease outbreak; and how to protect themselves from getting infections when managing patients.

“This training really helped me,” says Mohamed. “Actually, it will help us all perform our jobs better. The biggest thing I learnt is that if we do not detect, report and respond to some of the diseases in good time, they can spread fast and cause a large number of deaths. I also gained knowledge and skills on how to fill data in registers correctly and accurately, using reliable data, as well as how to follow up on disease trends and analyze them to stop the spread of diseases.”

Mohamed attending a training on event and syndromic surveillance, conducted by CERF in Qardho, Puntland.Mohamed attending a training on event and syndromic surveillance, conducted by CERF in Qardho, Puntland.

Sharing health messages to stop the spread of diseases

As part of the project, WHO supported the training and deployment of 200 community social mobilizers to enhance health promotion activities. Risk communication and community engagement activities were tailored to reach the general population, IDPs and host communities with health promotive messages.

An estimated 2 769 689 people were reached with health information in 12 target districts by the CERF Anticipatory Action Plan project, in collaboration with other initiatives.

Explaining how training sessions like these develop the capacity of Somali health professionals, Mohamed also added that the risk communication conducted under the project has been useful to local communities.

He reflects back to a case he cannot forget, where during a suspected outbreak of acute watery diarrhoea (AWD) in his village, in June 2020, 30 cases of AWD had been reported. One of the affected was an 8-month-old child, who was severely dehydrated and was brought to the Yaka Health Centre.

“We wanted to provide IV infusion to the child and refer him to another health facility. However, while we were trying to save his life, this young child passed away. This was the first child who died in the health centre since we upgraded it with community support. This made me really sad as these are preventable losses of life. We see that AWD outbreaks happen very often, and they affect many people, as our communities use dirty water in the berkats. If people had the right information about simple things like using clean water, it would really save lives.”

The work of WHO funded by CERF under the Anticipatory Action Plan framework aims at instituting early interventions for any impending health threat, such as disease outbreak, particularly in situations where data can reliably warn of a rapidly evolving or emerging health crisis and where a speedy and early response can make a big difference in preventing avoidable deaths and saving lives. WHO will continuously assess and monitor the impact of its early interventions in averting major disease outbreaks from preventable diseases such as cholera and measles through its ongoing work in capacitating health care workers for disease detection, prevention and control.

Technical note:

The CERF-supported Anticipatory Action Plan project aimed to address priorities identified in the assessments conducted by the Health Cluster and humanitarian partners on the floods that occurred early in 2020, and the Somalia Flood Response Plan (issued in June 2020). The project activated the community-based disease surveillance system in high-risk districts in Galmudug, Hirshabelle, Jubaland, Puntland and SouthWest States. As part of the project, WHO trained and deployed 100 rapid response and medical mobile teams; replenished emergency medical supplies to provide life-saving health care to 113 300 patients and enhanced risk communication and coordination activities. In addition, indoor residual spraying (IRS) campaigns were conducted in the target districts in efforts to minimize vector-borne diseases. The project targeted 170 869 direct beneficiaries, including 22 822 IDPs, in Galkayo and Hobyo districts in Galmudug state, Beletweyne and Jowhar districts in Hirshabelle state, Afmadow, Dolow and Kismayo districts in Jubaland state, Qardho district in Puntland, Zeylac district in Somaliland and Afgooye, Baidoa and Marka districts in South-West states.

Health workers celebrated on World Polio Day in Somalia

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The country is set to launch round two of a polio campaign in the south and central regions

MOGADISHU, 24 October 2020 – On World Polio Day, today, Somalia is celebrating polio workers’ continued commitment to reach and immunize every child in the country to end all forms of polio, and the role they play in strengthening the health system and responding to health emergencies.

Since the inception of Somalia’s polio eradication programme in 1997, hundreds of polio health workers have worked to stop outbreaks of various types of poliovirus, while also extending their support to shield communities from cholera, measles and other diseases.

Polio teams have set up supply chains to deliver vaccines to every accessible corner of the country and to dispatch samples for testing to laboratories in a timely manner. They have also established sensitive and modernized surveillance systems that can raise alerts about diseases within communities, share real-time information with stakeholders and set up social mobilization networks to disseminate health messages in every district of the country. While establishing crucial systems for health delivery and strengthening links between communities and health service providers, the teams have set up strong foundations for public health services.

Since the start of the year, polio health teams have joined the fight against COVID-19 in Somalia, providing support in tracing, tracking and following up on suspected and confirmed cases. Although health workers were forced to pause regular health services to attend to the COVID-19 pandemic, in the last month, Somalia has taken bold steps to resume regular health activities by conducting immunization campaigns to stop the spread of a rare strain of poliovirus.

To end the ongoing outbreak of polio, which has already infected 23 children, the Federal Ministry of Health and Human Services (FMOH) of Somalia, World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) confirm that well-trained health teams will conduct the final round of a two-round house-to-house polio campaign in the central and south regions of the country from 25 to 28 October.

“The first round of this vaccination campaign demonstrated that Somali health workers can be counted on to deliver vital immunization services safely during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using masks, sanitizer, hand washing and physical distancing measures, vaccinators and teams of social mobilizers safely met with families, answered parents’ questions and vaccinated children. Round one was a great success, and we have high expectations for round two,” said HE Dr Fawziya Abikar Nur, Federal Minister of Health.

In line with this year’s theme for World Polio Day, 'A win against polio is a win for global health', Dr Mamunur Malik, WHO Representative in Somalia joined the Minister of Health in commending polio workers.

“Thanks to the strides we have made so far, we would like to believe we are in the final stretch in the polio eradication journey now”, said Dr Malik.

“Every one of us needs to be cautious though, as even with wild poliovirus no longer in Africa, other strains of poliovirus still threaten Somali children. If Somali caregivers join the fight and ensure their children receive polio vaccines every time they are offered, we will be able to kick polio out of Somalia. This will help us to build on the legacy we have built so far, and to stamp out other communicable diseases in the country,” he said.

Some of the main challenges Somalia faces include reaching vulnerable children who are difficult to access due to security and other logistical challenges, and assuring caregivers that polio vaccines are safe for newborns.

“Aiming to reach every single child and providing vaccines to the most vulnerable children is part of our long-standing, collective commitment to child survival in Somalia. We are committed to working with the government and partners to eradicate vaccine-preventable diseases, strengthen routine immunization, and build stronger primary health care systems, so that the country can offer all of its children a better chance to survive and thrive,” said Jesper Moller, UNICEF Somalia Representative a.i.

Banadir_integrated_campaign_2

The upcoming campaign in numbers:

1.65 million children to be reached with oral polio vaccine

8951 vaccinators in urban and rural areas

1125 team supervisors and 364 monitors

3390 social mobilizers spreading information

66 trucks with speakers driving through communities to alert families

62 districts in the south and central regions of Somalia will be covered

All parents and caregivers are reminded to accept vaccines every time they are offered, to give children the best protection against polio.

For additional information, please contact

Fouzia Bhatti

WHO Somalia Communications Officer

Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ; Tel: +252 619 235 880

Eva Hinds

UNICEF Somalia Communication Manager

Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ; Tel: +252 613 642635

Notes to editors

The strain of polio in circulation in Somalia is different from the wild poliovirus, recently declared eradicated from Africa, but it can also put communities where not enough children have been vaccinated at risk and leave children paralyzed for life.

There are multiple strains of polio, and there is a critical distinction between wild or naturally occurring poliovirus, which is today only found in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and the strain circulating in Somalia today.

In late August 2020, the world celebrated a historic moment: the end of wild poliovirus in Africa. This achievement still stands. There is no wild poliovirus on the African continent. But other strains of polio remain a threat as long as there are communities with low immunity levels.

The only way to eradicate all strains of polio is to vaccinate all children everywhere against polio. In places where polio transmission has long been stopped and immunity levels are high, inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) is used. In places at high risk of poliovirus circulation, and where immunity levels are not as high as they need to be, the best tool for the job is the oral polio vaccine (OPV), which is being used in this vaccination campaign.

This polio campaign is supported by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), an organization dedicated to the eradication of polio. Launched in 1988, the GPEI is spearheaded by national governments, the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and UNICEF, and supported by key partners including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance.

Urgent need to scale up mental health services in Somalia

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Berbera Mental Hospital Somalia

MOGADISHU, 11 October 2020- On World Mental Health Day this year, the World Health Organization (WHO) in Somalia urged policy-makers, international and national agencies, and other civil society groups to scale up mental health services in Somalia. This request comes at a time when Somalis are faced with the consequences of the triple threat of COVID-19, flooding and desert locusts, in addition to other regular health and socioeconomic challenges.

According to estimates, one in every three Somalis is affected by a challenge related to their mental health. Unfortunately, however, there are only a few health facilities offering mental health services—for a country of 15 million, there are only 3 psychiatrists and 25 trained nurses dealing with mental health.

“Only when communities have access to good health in a holistic manner, physically and emotionally, can we have a peaceful, progressive and productive society,” said Dr Mamunur Malik, WHO Representative for Somalia. “We all need to join hands to ensure every Somali has access to mental health services, particularly psychosocial support at primary health care level.”

Dr Malik emphasized the inevitable health, economic and social costs that come with dismissing mental health problems. He explained that the burden of coping with diseases such as COVID-19 would only exacerbate the situation and result in more Somalis having to deal with unaddressed anxiety, stress and fear.

Since the first World Mental Health Day, launched 30 years ago, significant efforts have been made around the world to encourage people to talk openly about mental health conditions. In Somalia, there is a need to stop the stigma and discrimination against people suffering from mental health challenges. There is also a need to put an end to violence, and abuses orchestrated against those who are facing mental health problems.

The global theme for this year’s World Mental Health Day is ‘Move for Mental Health: let’s invest.’ In Somalia, in efforts to highlight the importance of ensuring mental health services are accessible by all, and to ensure that this becomes the norm for future generations, the country is commemorating the day with the theme ‘Investing in mental health is investing in Somalia’s future.’

The Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General and UN Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, Mr Adam Abdelmoula, released a recorded video message on World Mental Health Day, which is being broadcast across the WHO Somalia country office’s social media channels. In his message, he called for increasing development assistance from all humanitarian and development partners of Somalia to improve mental health services.

As mental health is fundamental to good health and the well-being of the population, WHO is urging all its partners and donors, including all UN agencies, to urgently scale up their support for mental health in the country and to break the cycle of neglect, lack of awareness, stigma and discrimination, which are often the drivers of poor mental health in any country.

….

For additional information, kindly contact:

Ms Fouzia Bano

WHO Somalia Communications Officer

Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ; Tel: +252 619 235 880

EU and WHO deliver emergency life-saving supplies to flood-affected areas in Somalia

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Mogadishu, 23 September 2020 – As part of continuous efforts to provide life-saving supplies to the most vulnerable Somalis, at the request of WHO, the European Union (EU) delegation to Somalia commissioned 2 special flights on 17 and 21 September to airlift emergency medical kits and supplies to Hirshabelle State. These supplies will be used to treat populations affected by flash floods in the state.

As soon as the Ministry of Health in Hirshabelle State noted an increase in the numbers of people contracting waterborne diseases, they alerted WHO to offer urgent support. The emergency supplies are being dispatched to the hardest-hit families, living around riverine areas in Balad, Beletweyne, Jalalaqsi, Jowhar and Mahaday.

“This is the fourth time this year that the EU delegation has shown immense and timely support to Somalia. Thanks to the swift action taken by them, and with guidance from the Ministry of Health in Hirshabelle, we have been able to support some of the worst-hit families,” said Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative for Somalia. “We still have a long way to go to help prepare communities for disasters like this. Floods are recurrent along the Shabelle River, communities living in affected areas are at risk of being infected by waterborne diseases, like diarrhoea, and vector-borne diseases, in addition to COVID-19, which spreads easily where people live in confined areas.”

Both EU flights commissioned in the last week carried 7.2 tonnes and 29 cubic metres of emergency supplies from Mogadishu to Jowhar. The supplies include 51 Interagency Emergency Health (IEH) kits, each providing essential health care in emergency settings for up to 10 000 people over a 3-month period; 104 trauma kits allowing for 10 400 surgical interventions, to serve 5200 patients; 446 cholera kits capable of serving 44 600 patients, 32 surgical kits, each serving 100 patients; sample collection kits; tubes for sample collection and dengue testing kits; surgical instruments and one cholera treatment centre tent of 20 beds. Over 563 000 persons will benefit from these life-saving emergency medical supplies, which will stop further spread of waterborne diseases among communities living along the Shabelle River.

"Already vulnerable families in Beletweyne, Jalalaqsi, Jowhar, Mahaday and other communities along the Shabelle River are facing life and death situations as a result of flash floods, in addition to the challenges caused by COVID-19," the EU Ambassador to Somalia Nicolas Berlanga said. "The latest EU-commissioned flights are further evidence of the European Union’s commitment to the people of Somalia and our belief that we are more effective when we join hands with other organizations such as WHO Somalia. Our cooperation has and will continue to save lives."

Note to editors

This joint operation remains part of the bilateral coordination mechanism established between WHO Somalia and the Delegation of the EU to Somalia, which aims to strengthen operational response activities, including for COVID-19. On 3 May, EU flights also airlifted critical medical equipment and supplies from Mogadishu to Kismayo to support Jubaland State to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak. Following this intervention, on 20 and 21 May, the EU airlifted life-saving medicine and other emergency hospital supplies to Jowhar, Kismayo and Baidoa ‒ areas which were also affected recently by floods caused by heavy rains. Two other flights were organized on 11–12 June to airlift life-saving medicine and other emergency hospital supplies to Beletweyne, as well as medical and laboratory supplies to Hargeisa and Garowe. In addition, the European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO) has provided US $1.8 million to WHO’s COVID-19 preparedness and response operations in Somalia. WHO and the EU delegation to Somalia will continue to collaborate in the future, in efforts to reach the most vulnerable populations.

Related links

WHO and EU unite to fight COVID-19 in Somalia

EU and WHO unite to deliver critical life-saving supplies to flood-affected areas in Somalia

European Union and WHO Somalia deliver more emergency hospital supplies

For further information:

Mr Kyle DeFreitas
External Relations & Resource Mobilization Officer
WHO Somalia
Mob: +254-782-501-324
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Ms. Fouzia Bano
Communications Officer
WHO Somalia
Mob: +252 619 235880
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Mr Vicente Sellés
Delegation of the European Union to the Federal Republic of Somalia
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

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