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Saving lives and reducing disability from injuries in Somalia: a new approach to trauma care

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11 November 2021 – In the last 3 decades, Somalia has faced protracted conflict and emergencies — as a result of which the high burden of injuries has been ubiquitous and often poorly addressed from the public health lens. 

The public health burden of injuries and trauma 

In December 2020 and January 2021, the Federal Ministry of Health, with technical support from World Health Organization (WHO), conducted a rapid assessment of critical care services in 136 hospitals across 18 regions and focus group discussions with frontline health care workers in Somalia. This was supported by the World Bank under its Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility to improve access to health services in Somalia. 

The assessment revealed that trauma imposes a heavy burden on the Somali health system and the community at large. The hospitals had recorded more than 37 000 civilian trauma cases over 12 months. Yet, the survey referred to cases of conflict alone. If it had included road traffic accidents, domestic injuries and burns, or covered small peripheral hospitals and primary health care centres, the number of civilian trauma cases recorded would have been even higher. The Global Burden of Disease Study published in 2019 by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, Seattle, shows that the share of the disability burden of injuries increased from 6.23% in 2000 (age-standardized rate: 5617.28 disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost per 100 000 population) to 8.60% (age-standardized rate: 5739.72 DALYs lost per 100 000 population) in 2019. These figures are projected to increase to 6300.88 age-standardized DALYs per 100 000 population and 6.49% of DALYs lost in Somalia in 2030. The substantial increase in conflict and terror as well as the increased burden of road injuries observed between 2000 and 2019 were the main factors driving the upward trend in injury-related deaths and disability in Somalia. The study also showed that deaths caused by injuries were estimated to be 119.10 per 100 000 population in Somalia in 2019, and injuries were responsible for an estimated 7.35% of all deaths reported in the country. 

Injuries and trauma pose a double threat to affected communities. In addition to the physical burden caused by injuries, trauma is also known to have a negative effect on the socioeconomic environment in a country. By this measure, it increases poverty levels, as families of the injured need to spend substantive time, money and efforts caring for their loved ones. 

The capacity of the existing system  

In Somalia, there is a scarcity of health personnel. For example, there are no paediatric trauma specialists and no recognized medical anaesthetists working in the public sector. Half of the hospitals surveyed functioned with only one or 2 general surgeons and only 5 hospitals claimed to have surgeons with a background in orthopaedic surgery. 

There is currently no effective pre-hospital system beyond central Mogadishu; and communities in rural and remote areas have little or no access to trauma care.  In the wider picture, this includes maternity services and women die needlessly for want of basic prehospital care. 

“It is an undeniable paradox that in recent times those most in need of trauma care services are the least able to access those services. As one of the few UN agencies working in this field, WHO has stepped up to provide technical assistance and coordinate the trauma care response in the country,” said Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative to Somalia. “This support is largely being steered by the Government of Somalia, and we are working closely with hospitals and personnel to make advances in this field.”  

Establishing a WHO trauma programme for Somalia 

The WHO country office for Somalia, with support from the WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, is setting up a trauma care programme that is built on the vision of a holistic approach to trauma, from the point of injury, when one is injured, through surgery to the physical rehabilitation of the patient, back into the community.  

As part of this initiative, the WHO delivered the first Surgical Team Approach to Trauma (STAT) course, using high technology surgical simulation facilities and virtual reality. Overall, 31 health workers were trained, bringing together surgeons and anaesthetists to embed a team-based approach to trauma management. The training took place from 3 to 7 October in Mogadishu and 11 to 15 October 2021 in Berbera. Trainees were exposed to high fidelity scenarios in an operating theatre, all while observing strict COVID-19 protocols and minimizing the spread of infection. They also learnt how to use ultrasound at the point of care and in emergency departments.  

As an anaesthetist working at the Baidoa Medical Hospital, Dr Abdirahman Mohamed Hassan shared his reflections: 


participants-somalia-trauma-trainingTrainees were able to watch live how a trauma teams works in other contexts, including the UK“After the training, I realized the value of working together as a team in my hospital. Now, we have started to share all the knowledge we have and experiences we go through, both in person and on group chats, and it feels really good for all of us, as we are learning best practices together every day. I can already see that this has better outcomes for our patients. Before this, there was no groupwork or teamwork – we all worked on our own,” Dr Hassan said. 

Two other crucial lessons Dr Hassan learnt is that anaesthesia can be administered on patients even if they aren’t fasting, as previously, he believed he had to wait until the patient had been on an empty stomach for a while, which caused unnecessary delays in fragile situations. Dr Hassan also learnt that anaesthetists play a key and active role in responding to trauma patients, and that their role is not limited to addressing patients before and during the surgeries.

“Last week, a 35-year-old man who was involved in a car crash outside Baidoa was rushed to the hospital. He was bleeding profusely around his pelvic area. I took over the situation as a team lead. I assessed the case, compressed the wound, checked the patient’s airway, offered intubation, and rehydrated him. I worked swiftly with the teams in the emergency ward and operating theatre, and, of course, also checked on the patient before, during and after the surgery,” said Dr Hassan. “I was so confident in my response to him, thanks to this training by WHO.”

Using creative and effective ways to create an impact  

Both the Ministry of Health and WHO also arranged for trainees to work in simulated situations in high-quality operating theatres. By way of this initiative, they learnt how to maintain hygiene and wear their protective equipment to reduce the spread of infections. 

The trainers also lent the participants modern, virtual headsets for them to use to test their knowledge, by experiencing different virtual reality scenarios. Trainers used these creative and highly effective methods of imparting knowledge in addition to presentations and theory.    

Dr Sara Halimah, WHO Regional Trauma Specialist, explained that the trauma programme attempts to provide a stepwise, practical, and realistic approach to the management of victims of trauma. 

“Although the acute humanitarian needs of Somalia are at the heart of this initiative, it recognises that a long-term problem necessitates a long-term solution, and that humanitarian and development efforts must be aligned to build a trauma care system that not only responds to today’s humanitarian needs but also developing a system that will serve the future needs of Somalia to reduce the high burden of injuries as a public health problem in the country,” Dr Halimah added.

trauma-trainingThrough the training, health professionals worked with animal carcasses to learn how to address bullet wounds

Building on what has been achieved with support from the World Bank‘s funding from Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility in January-March 2021 and capitalizing on this new initiative on “Surgical Team Approach to Trauma (STAT),” the WHO country office will work with the federal and state ministries of health to set up a trauma care system as part of emergency, critical and operative care services in the country, as part of Somalia’s overarching goal of achieving universal health coverage, leaving no one behind. 

Somalia receives another shipment of 336 500 doses of Johnson & Johnson vaccines donated by the United States Government through the COVAX Facility

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j-and-j-vaccines-us-governmentCredit: UNSOM/Mukhtar Nuur

8 November 2021 – As the head of the Shabellow Bay Camp for internally displaced persons in southwest Somalia Ibrahim Mohamed Ali spends a lot of his time trying to convince his community members to get vaccinated against COVID-19.  

Ibrahim explains that even though his cousin in Baidoa had advised him to get vaccinated earlier on, he was not totally convinced at first, as no one seemed to know enough about the virus and vaccines — it all seemed so new to everyone.

“After seeing a number of my friends in the camp die all of a sudden due to COVID-19, I realized that the vaccination would help me to fight COVID-19 and could save my life,” said Ibrahim. 

He adds, “This was the first time I had ever received a vaccine for my health, and I am so thankful to the Ministry of Health, the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF and all donors who have made the effort to support me and other Somalis to keep safe from COVID-19.” 

Support from the US Government key to preventing COVID-19 spread  

Somalis have been able to receive COVID-19 vaccines with the support of donors such as the Government of the United States of America (USA), through the COVAX Facility. WHO and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) have been supporting the federal and state ministries of health to offer vaccines in all states. 

In August 2021, the US Government donated 302 400 doses of Johnson & Johnson vaccines to Somalia. Following this, on 7 November 2021, Somalia received another shipment of an additional 336 500 doses of Johnson & Johnson vaccines. In a country where an estimated 2.6 million people are permanently internally displaced and an estimated 26% of the country’s population are nomadic, this one-dose regimen of COVID-19 vaccines are ideally suitable for Somalia to fully vaccinate as many at-risk populations as possible to end the pandemic.    

man-to-receive-vaccineCredit: WHO Somalia/Ismail Taxta

“The one-dose COVID-19 vaccines that Somalia has received are a game-changer for the country’s displaced, nomadic and other vulnerable populations as this is a one-dose regimen unlike other COVID-19 vaccines and owing to the mobility of these groups of people, this one dose can offer immunity and protection to these groups and can rapidly increase the number of people fully vaccinated against COVID-19 in the country,” said Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative to Somalia. 

Already popular within communities, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine needs only one dose to be administered to offer protection against COVID-19. This consignment of vaccines will be used to protect mainly internally displaced persons, nomads and other populations who are difficult to access.

Fewer women than men vaccinated so far 

appCredit: WHO Somalia/Ismail Taxta

As of 6 November, Somalia had administered 693 683 doses of COVID-19 vaccines, which can be translated as 4.43 doses/100 people administered. So far, 2.37% of the Somali population have been partially vaccinated and 2.06% have been fully vaccinated, with most of the doses having been administered in urban areas. Just over one third (39%) of people vaccinated are women. 

The Ministry of Health, with support from WHO and UNICEF, will deploy 496 teams in November 2021 to reach more people with the COVID-19 vaccines received, in an effort to prevent further spread of COVID-19.

In fight against COVID-19, Germany donates 163 000 COVID-19 vaccine doses to Somalia through COVAX Facility

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Vaccine-arrival_German-donation_photo-5_UNICEF_26-October-2021Photo: UNICEF/Hinds

Mogadishu, 26 October 2021 – Somalia is scaling up its battle to combat the COVID-19 pandemic after receiving 163 000 doses of Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccines from the Government of Germany through the COVAX Facility today.

“The Government of Germany has extended its valuable support to Somalia in the fight against COVID-19 and we would like to thank them for this,” said Dr Fawziya Abikar Nur, the Minister of Health and Human Services of Somalia. “So far, 1.85% of our population has been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. With the support from Germany, we can ramp up our efforts to ensure more Somalis have access to the life-saving vaccines. It is only when we join forces that we become strong enough to stamp out diseases, like COVID-19, from Somalia and the rest of the countries all over the world.”

“We stand firmly with Somalia to protect its people against COVID-19,” said Sascha Kienzle, Deputy Ambassador to Somalia. “As the second largest donor to the global response to COVID-19, and one of the co-founders of the ACT-A, a distribution platform for COVID-19 vaccines, we understand the importance of ensuring safe and equitable access to these vaccines for every country to end this pandemic and to ensure vaccine equity. I hope our support will enable Somalia to immunize more of its citizens, giving them an opportunity to lead healthy lives and contribute to the country’s economy and development goals.”

In August 2021, the Government of Germany donated around 1.3 million face masks to WHO for Somalis to use and stay safe from COVID-19 and other infectious respiratory diseases.

“Donors, such as the Government of Germany, are playing an important role in the response plan for COVID-19. Together with the Federal Government of Somalia and UNICEF, WHO is supporting the vaccination drive to improve the uptake and use all means to reach every eligible Somali to receive a vaccine against COVID-19,” said Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative to Somalia.

“Immunization is an effective intervention to halt the spread of COVID-19 and the dose donations, through the COVAX Facility, play an important role in enhancing equitable and safe access to the vaccines in Somalia. UNICEF is grateful to the Government of Germany and remains steadfast in its commitment to support the Ministry of Health in managing the cold chain systems to deliver the vaccines safely and in deploying community mobilizers to encourage the uptake of the vaccine,” said UNICEF Somalia Representative, Mohamed Ayoya.

Besides frontline workers, people aged over 50 and those with pre-existing medical conditions continue to be prioritized for vaccination. Somalia is also offering vaccines to all people aged 18 years and above.

When vaccines are prioritized for essential workers and people who are at highest risk of COVID-19 complications, health and other essential services will continue to function and deaths can be prevented. Unless health workers and other essential workers are protected, health systems and other essential services will remain overwhelmed, and the most vulnerable populations, including children, will continue to lose access to life-saving services, risking years of progress being reversed.

As of 25 October 2021, 652 886 doses have been administered in the country. So far, 289 925 (1.85%) people have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and 362 961 (2.32%) have been partially vaccinated. 

Since the COVID-19 outbreak began in March 2020, Somalia has reported 21 998 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 1208 deaths, as of 25 October 2021.                                                   

For additional information, please contact:

Khadar Hussein Mohamud
Head of Coordination and Communication
Federal Ministry of Health and Human Services
Somalia
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
+252 615 602 637

Judith Gosmann
Policy Officer, Somalia Unit
Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany to Somalia
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ,
+254 758 726 179

Fouzia Bano
WHO Chief of Staff ai, Communications Officer
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
+252 619 235 880 

Eva Hinds
UNICEF Communication Manager
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
+252 613 642 635 

Note to editors

Please see the link below for more information on the face masks donated by the Government of Germany to Somalia:
WHO EMRO | Germany donates 1.3 million face masks to WHO for its COVID-19 response work in Somalia: more face masks means more people protected | News | Somalia site

The COVAX Facility is a partnership between the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO). The facility aims to provide vaccines for at least 20% of countries’ populations.

More information on the COVAX Facility and the ACT-A Accelerator 

                                                                                                       

 

Somalia rolls out FETP-Frontline training programme to build disease detectives and prevent spread of diseases

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25 October 2021 – Having a public health workforce that is able to rapidly detect and respond to disease outbreaks is key for any health system, as recently shown on a worldwide scale with the current COVID-19 pandemic. The importance of this empowered and well-equipped resource is further emphasized by the International Health Regulations (IHR 2005), a legal instrument that encourages countries to prevent, detect and respond appropriately to disease outbreaks.   

Taking measures to empower health workforce 

fetpA WHO staff member facilitating a group discussion during the first training workshop for the first cohort of the FETP-Frontline programme

To address Somalia’s limited capacity in disease surveillance and response, largely a result of decades of political instability, civil unrest, climatic shocks, and manmade and health emergencies, the Somalia National Institute of Health (NIH) and the Federal Ministry of Health and Human Services organized the Frontline-Field Epidemiology Training Programme (FETP-Frontline), with support from the Africa Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET), the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (US CDC),  the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Public Health Agency of Sweden. 

The FETP-Frontline is a 3-month on-the-job training that addresses the critical skills needed to conduct surveillance and response activities effectively at the local level, focusing on improving disease detection, reporting and response. It is based on the premise that improving the epidemiological skills of staff from the Ministry of Health improves their ability to prevent, detect and respond to public health priority issues, which in turn would improve public health security in a country. It aims to improve field epidemiology knowledge, skills and competencies of trainees, and blends mentorship with classroom training and practical experiences to develop the public health workforce of a country. The trainees spend up to 12 days in 3 workshops and the remaining 8–10 weeks back at their jobs, where they conduct field projects to practise, implement and reinforce what they have learned.  

The FETP-Frontline is part of a 3-tiered training model which is implemented in many countries based on the recognition that strengthening the capacity of the public health workforce, especially in countries with fragile, vulnerable and conflict-affected countries, is critical at all levels of the health system, from the local to the regional to the national level. All 3 tiers use the same approach of condensed classroom instruction (<25%, followed by field placements >75%) to gain experience and competence in field epidemiology. The other 2 tiers of this training model are called the FETP-Intermediate (9-month programme for staff based at regional or national level) and FETP-Advanced (2-year full time programme for staff at national level). 

Rolling out the first phase of the FETP training 

The NIH kickstarted the 12-week long FETP-Frontline training programme with a first workshop, conducted from 29 August to 2 September 2021 for 26 participants, followed by practical field experience, and a second training workshop that ran from 6 to 12 October 2021.  

Dignitaries attending the launch of the FETP training on 29 August included Dr Abdinasir Mukhtar Ibrahim, the Director-General of the Federal Ministry of Health and Human Services; Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, the WHO Representative to Somalia; representatives from the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) Mission; and Dr Abdifatah Diriye Ahmed, the Director of the NIH for Somalia. Others who attended included the technical team from AFENET.  

The first of 3 tiers of training, the initial phase focused on training health workers at the frontlines of public health surveillance.  

Participants-at-FETPParticipants at the Somalia Frontline Field Epidemiology Training Programme

Streamlining reporting through field experiences 

Adan Mohamed Ali, who serves the National Malaria Control Programme run by the Federal Ministry of Health of Somalia, was one of the first 26 participants to attend this preliminary FETP training. 

He explains that during the first phase of the 5-day classroom learning, he learnt a lot about disease surveillance, monitoring and evaluation, descriptive epidemiology and case investigation. As part of the on-the-job training, which comprises 75% of each training, Adan visited health facilities in the district of Kahda, Banadir region. The second set of training focused on presenting the results, outbreak investigation and response, laboratory collection and transport, problem analysis and communication. 

“While conducting the audit, I was supposed to visit 6 health facilities. However, only 2 were still functioning and one was reporting to the Early Warning Alert and Response Network (EWARN). I tried to convince the facilities that were not reporting to do so, and help in the search for diseases, which would help the Government to prevent spread of diseases in communities,” explains Aden. “Through the field exercise, I learnt to identify gaps and challenges of disease surveillance and response in health facilities. I studied records for epidemiological weeks 1-36 for this year by reviewing log books, tally sheets, charts and graphs and interviewed health facility staff on reporting disease alerts, timeliness of reporting and discussed challenges the staff face in timely reporting of alerts.” 

He added that efforts like this were important as they would help the country’s health system to streamline reporting of alerts and surveillance for epidemic-prone diseases. 

Upon completion of the 3-month FETP-Frontline training programme, Adan and other successful trainees will move on to the intermediate and later advanced level courses, while at the same time becoming trainers for the next cohort.  

Impact of the FETP

The evaluation of the first series of trainings shows an encouraging improvement in trainees’ knowledge, which is now being applied in their daily work. This programme will increase the capacity of Somalia’s health workforce in disease surveillance and outbreak response at all levels of service delivery. Moreover, the training will develop the capacity of trainees and health facilities to detect and respond to disease outbreaks in a timely manner and minimize the spread of diseases to contain them. Trainees will also gain skills to communicate risk to the public and design messages that will support policy- and decision-makers to implement effective public health responses. 

“The WHO country office for Somalia is fully committed to continue working alongside the NIH, the CDC and AFENET to roll out the next steps of the FETP programme in Somalia, which will bring the country closer to bridging the current gap in number of epidemiologists per 100 000 population in Somalia and build a strong cadre of disease detectives in line with the requirements of the IHR 2005,” said Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative to Somalia.  

“The Frontline-FETP is one of the outcomes of the strong collaboration between the Federal Ministry of Health and our health development partners in addressing the most critical challenges of our health system, which is human resources for health,” said Dr Abdifatah Diriye Ahmed, NIH Director.

The WHO’s work in supporting the country’s FETP-Frontline training programme in Somalia is supported by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) and the work reflects WHO’s strong collaboration with its partner- The Public Health Agency of Sweden to promote and support the activities of the NIH.  

World Polio Day 2021: Delivering on the promise to protect every Somali child from polio

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polio-somalia-2021

Mogadishu, 24 October 2021 – On World Polio Day 2021, the Federal Government of Somalia, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and other key partners from the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) renewed their efforts to deliver on the promise to protect every Somali child from polio. 

Over the years, Somalia has made substantial progress in polio eradication. The country stopped the transmission of wild poliovirus in 2013 and prevented its subsequent importations. However, outbreaks of other strains of poliovirus still pose a threat to unvaccinated children. 

In March 2021, after 28 months, Somalia’s polio programme and partners successfully stopped an outbreak of a rare strain of circulating poliovirus type 3 (cVDPV3). Currently, an outbreak of circulating poliovirus type 2 (cVDPV2), detected for the first time in Somalia in the environment in November 2017 and in a child on 11 May 2018, continues to threaten under-vaccinated children. So far, 23 children have been infected, with the last reported case detected in October 2021.

Somalia’s polio programme is foundational to the health care system of the country and is a critical asset for disease surveillance and primary health care. With an extensive network of over 149 national and subnational polio health workers, present in every district across the country, the programme has provided immediate, urgent support to other outbreaks and public health emergencies. 

With a vision to strengthen Somalia’s health systems while optimizing existing resources, the country is rolling out a polio transition plan capitalizing on the existing network of health workers to support other priority health care functions and streamline health service delivery. These efforts will ensure the country makes progress towards universal health coverage. 

Tapping into new, rigorously tested innovations to respond to and prevent polio outbreaks swiftly and robustly, Somalia is at the forefront of countries to qualify for the use of a next-generation polio vaccine – known as novel oral polio vaccine (nOPV2). This vaccine protects children, particularly under-immunized ones, from the emergence of polio strains, as is genetically more stable than the monovalent oral polio vaccine (mOPV2), which is why it is being used as the “vaccine of choice” to address cVDPV2 outbreaks. Somalia is ready to use nOPV2 vaccines as soon as they are made available, which would be a significant development for polio eradication efforts.

In September 2021, the polio eradication programme in Somalia introduced fractional-dose inactivated polio vaccines (fIPV) in 5 districts, reaching a total of 80 916 children under the age of 5. This pilot project was another innovative milestone for the country, particularly as a fraction of this vaccine offers a specific kind of immunity that is similar to one full dose of inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) in children previously immunized with oral polio vaccine (OPV). The use of fIPV is critical in responding to an outbreak such as the one in Somalia. 

world-polio-day-2021

“We have come very far in the fight against polio,” said Dr Fawziya Abikar Nur, Minister of Health and Human Services, Somalia. “Despite this progress, we still need to ensure threats such as COVID-19 and any future pandemics and emergencies, and other logistical challenges do not reverse any gains made by the polio eradication initiative. On World Polio Day, we are taking this opportunity to renew our promise to every Somali child, to do all we can to keep them free from polio.”

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, Somalia has conducted 2 nationwide and 7 subnational door-to-door polio campaigns, typically targeting around 3 258 352 children under the age of 5 per campaign across the country, and 3 small-scale campaigns to target children living in high-risk hotspots. 

“WHO remains committed in its resolve to protect Somali children from polio and other vaccine-preventable diseases,” said Dr Mamunur Rahman Malik, WHO Representative to Somalia. “Every milestone we have witnessed so far, including the new ones such as the introduction of a new, powerful polio vaccines, has years of planning, research and collaboration, coupled with the unwavering support from donors, dedication of health workers and conviction of communities and caregivers behind it. We would like to thank each one of our stakeholders for their commitment.”

2021-world-polio-day

“Since the first national campaigns in 1997, a lot has been achieved to save Somali children from preventable paralysis of poliomyelitis,” said UNICEF Representative Mohamed Ayoya. “However, large numbers of children in Somalia do not receive immunization and other necessary health services. On this World Polio Day, we must commit ourselves to ensuring that polio no longer poses a threat to Somali children. No child should be left behind.”

For additional information, please contact: 

Khadar Hussein Mohamud
Head of Coordination and Communication
Federal Ministry of Health
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , +252 615 602 637

Fouzia Bano
WHO Chief of Staff ai, Communications Officer
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
+252 619 235 880 

Eva Hinds
UNICEF Communication Manager
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
+252 613 642 635

Notes to editor:

For more information on novel oral polio vaccine (nOPV2), kindly see: nOPV2 – GPEI (polioeradication.org)

Additional information on the fractional dose IPV can be found here: Fractional dose IPV shown effective to stop outbreaks – GPEI (polioeradication.org). 

The pilot project on fractional dose IPV in Somalia can guide national decision-making on the use of this vaccine in the country, as a scale-up of fIPV can be incorporated into routine immunization programmes to make the most of IPV stocks available, in view of the global shortage of IPV, and to increase immunization coverage of IPV in Somalia.

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