WHO EMRO
  • Sites régionaux
WHO EMRO
Sites régionaux de l’OMS
Afrique Afrique
Amériques Amériques
South-East Asia South-East Asia
Europe Europe
Eastern Mediterranean Eastern Mediterranean
Western Pacific Western Pacific
  • Accueil
  • Thèmes de santé
  • Données et statistiques
  • Centre des médias
  • Ressources
  • Pays
  • Programmes
  • À propos de l'OMS
Recherche Recherche

Recherche

- Tous les mots: renvoie uniquement les documents correspondant à tous les mots.
- N'importe quel mot: renvoie les documents correspondant à n'importe quel mot.
- Phrase exacte: renvoie uniquement les documents qui correspondent à la phrase exacte saisie.
- Préfixe de phrase: fonctionne comme le mode Phrase exacte, sauf qu'il permet des correspondances de préfixe sur le dernier terme du texte.
- Wildcard: renvoie les documents qui correspondent à une expression générique.
- Requête floue: renvoie les documents contenant des termes similaires au terme de recherche. Par exemple : si vous recherchez Kolumbia. Il renverra les résultats de recherche contenant la Columbie ou la Colombie.
  • Site mondial
  • Sites régionaux
    Sites régionaux de l’OMS
    • Afrique Afrique
    • Amériques Amériques
    • Asie du Sud-Est Asie du Sud-Est
    • Europe Europe
    • Méditerranée orientale Méditerranée orientale
    • Pacifique occidental Pacifique occidental
Recherche Recherche

Recherche

- Tous les mots: renvoie uniquement les documents correspondant à tous les mots.
- N'importe quel mot: renvoie les documents correspondant à n'importe quel mot.
- Phrase exacte: renvoie uniquement les documents qui correspondent à la phrase exacte saisie.
- Préfixe de phrase: fonctionne comme le mode Phrase exacte, sauf qu'il permet des correspondances de préfixe sur le dernier terme du texte.
- Wildcard: renvoie les documents qui correspondent à une expression générique.
- Requête floue: renvoie les documents contenant des termes similaires au terme de recherche. Par exemple : si vous recherchez Kolumbia. Il renverra les résultats de recherche contenant la Columbie ou la Colombie.

Sélectionnez votre langue

  • اللغة العربية
  • English
WHO EMRO WHO EMRO
  • Accueil
  • Thèmes de santé
  • Données et statistiques
  • Centre des médias
  • Ressources
  • Pays
  • Programmes
  • À propos de l'OMS
  1. Home
  2. Syria site
  3. Syria site - priority areas

Measles

Despite access challenges, considerable success has been achieved in halting the spread of measles in Syria. In 2019, following a rise in the number of confirmed cases of measles in two consecutive years (2017 and 2018), WHO supported four mass measles vaccination campaigns to control the outbreak and strengthen routine immunization activities in all governorates. Only 27 cases of measles were confirmed in 2019, compared with 738 and 329 in 2017 and 2018, respectively.

In northern Syria, 716 suspected measles cases were reported in 2019, a figure 25 times lower than the 17 931 cases reported a year earlier. The highest numbers of suspected cases were from Idleb, Aleppo (northwest Syria) and Ar-Raqqa (northeast Syria). The significant decrease can be partly attributed to the two measles and rubella vaccination campaigns conducted in 2018 as well as increased routine immunization services in the northwest.

Leishmaniasis

Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is endemic in Syria. This parasitic disease is caused by protozoa of the genus Leishmania, transmitted by the bites of sandflies. Transmission of the disease occurs during the sandfly season from May to September each year, but the lesions only begin appearing between October and December. In total, 89 357 cases of leishmaniasis were reported in all of Syria between January and December 2019. The northern governorates of Aleppo, Al-Hasakeh, Ar-Raqqa, Deir-ez-Zor and Idleb accounted for 94% of cases.

In northwest Syria, the number of new cases of CL rose sharply. One health cluster partner alone diagnosed and treated 17 653 new cases, representing an increase of 63% compared with 2018. The most affected areas were Idleb and Harim district in Idleb governorate followed by Jebel Saman in Aleppo governorate. WHO’s office in Damascus conducted 11 workshops on CL surveillance, management and diagnosis, and equipped 270 health workers and laboratory technicians in Aleppo, Al-Hasakeh, Damascus, Deir ez-Zor, Lattakia and Tartous with tools to tackle the spread of the disease. Nearly 70 000 insecticidetreated nets were delivered to Aleppo, Ar-Raqqa and Deir-ez-Zor, benefitting more than 200 000 people. WHO also provided 302 000 ampoules of meglumine antimoniate to treat approximately 60 000 leishmaniasis patients. WHO’s office in Gaziantep distributed 140 000 bednets, trained 1450 health care providers and provided medicines, instruments and materials for the indoor residual spraying of 182 000 households.

HIV

In Syria in 2019, 58 patients were diagnosed with HIV, suggesting the notification rate (1 per 100 000 people) had remained unchanged compared with previous years. Damascus and Aleppo, Syria’s two largest cities, reported 20 and 10 patients each. WHO supported seven HIV workshops attended by 165 health workers in Damascus. Training encompassed the national protocol for managing patients with HIV, preventing the mother-to-child transmission of HIV, and other topics. In July, high-risk groups in Al-Hol camp were screened for HIV and invited to awareness and counselling sessions. No HIV cases were detected.

Haemodialysis services

Haemodialysis centres throughout Syria suffer from a lack of central management, poor IPC practices and limited services for patients with hepatitis B and C virus (HBV and HCV) and HIV. Securing dialysis kits and maintaining machines and water treatment units are constant challenges. Widespread shortages of haemodialysis facilities have meant that that thousands of Syrians have had no access to these life-saving services.

In 2019, WHO’s updated service map of haemodialysis facilities in northwest Syria showed that 21 centres (nine in Aleppo and 12 in Idleb5) were carrying out 6500 sessions for 655 patients each month. WHO’s survey of bloodborne viruses among these patients showed that 320 (48%) had HCV, 29 had HBV and one patient had HIV. WHO conducted an HBV vaccination campaign and procured IPC and haemodialysis kits for 500 patients for six months. WHO supported five haemodialysis centres in northeast Syria by maintaining equipment, delivering water supplies and purification systems, providing 10 haemodialysis machines and supporting 10 900 haemodialysis sessions.

Page 3 sur 5

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Plan du site
    • Accueil
    • Thèmes de santé
    • Centre des médias
    • Données et statistiques
    • Ressources
    • Pays
    • Programmes
    • À propos de l'OMS
  • Aide et services
    • Travailler à l'OMS
    • Droits d’auteur
    • Privacy
    • Nous contacter
  • Bureaux de l'OMS
    • Siège de l'OMS
    • Région de l'Afrique
    • Région des Amériques
    • Région du Pacifique occidental
    • Région de l'Asie du Sud-Est
    • Région de l'Europe
WHO EMRO

Politique de confidentialité

© OMS 2025