Sign In or Register | Saturday, April 20, 2024
AfricaTeam,   5/23/2019 1:44:56 PM Add AfricaTeam as a Friend   |  Send Message
Africa See Profile
WHO Distributes Urgently Needed Medical Supplies As Libya Conflict Continues

 The medical supplies have been received by more than 30 primary health care facilities and main hospitals across Libya
GENEVA, Switzerland, May 22, 2019/ -- WHO has delivered medicines and medical supplies to health facilities across Libya to meet shortages amid intense conflict in the country’s capital. The shipments, sufficient for more than 600 000 beneficiaries, include emergency medical supplies, trauma kits to treat injured patients, and medicines for chronic and infectious diseases.

 

Included are insulin and blood glucose test strips, as well as medicines to treat asthma and high blood pressure. Medicines for respiratory infections are also part of the shipments, as increasing cases have been reported through the WHO-supported disease surveillance and rapid response system.

The medical supplies have been received by more than 30 primary health care facilities and main hospitals across Libya, including areas inside Tripoli where many displaced people are sheltering, as well as hospitals that are receiving casualties from the fighting.

“The conflict in the capital has created many logistical challenges preventing health facilities from receiving supplies, so this distribution is a major breakthrough,” says Dr Syed Jaffar Hussain, WHO Representative in Libya. “We’re making sure that critical gaps at health facilities are covered so that patients will have the medicines they need to get well. These supplies will cover the needs of health facilities for the next 3 months.”

 

Even before the crisis in Tripoli escalated in April 2019, medical supplies often ran short in Libya. The current conflict has closed roads, damaged ambulances, limited airplane traffic, caused a sharp rise in the price of petrol, and created many other obstacles to providing supplies and health care to patients.

With cases of malaria also confirmed in Libya recently, WHO has also donated anti-malarial drugs to the national centre for disease control.

“We have been monitoring the health needs of thousands of people who fled their homes due to bombing in Tripoli, and who are now living in centres for the displaced,” says Dr Hussein Y. Hassan, Health Emergencies Lead for WHO Libya. “Many are suffering from chronic diseases and their treatments were interrupted by the ongoing displacement. These supplies will make sure that many patients are now able to resume the life-saving treatments they need.”

 

The supplies, many of which were shipped from WHO’s logistics hub in Dubai, were funded by the governments of Germany and Italy, as well as the U.S. Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance and the Central Emergency Response Fund of the United Nations.

In addition to its emergency response work, WHO helps improve the health of people living in all areas across the country. WHO sends Emergency Medical Teams with surgical capacities to treat patients who have little access to care, supplies health facilities with essential medicines, and trains Libya’s health workers to prevent and control diseases.

 

 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of World Health Organization (WHO).
SOURCE
World Health Organization (WHO)

Bookmark and Share Email Email to Friends Print Print
0
 
Facebook Twitter YouTube Instagram Linkedin African Music
Push
Post a New Story from your Account, then Vote for it Here by clicking Push



Most Popular
Latest Forums
Latest Polls
Links
Tags
    Nigeria    Kenya    
South Africa    Ghana    
Africa's Top 10 National Parks    The Cost of an African Safari Adventure: From Budget to Luxury    Egypt    Ethiopia    Zimbabwe    
Uganda    African Development Bank    Africa    Tanzania    Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Has Issued a Directive to All Nigerian Banks    Test    Kenya a Hot bed of Investments    Mosi-oa-Tunya Falls "The Smoke That Thunders"    Pope Francis On Safari In Kenya    The Greatest Footballer Ever    
Media Kit | Site Map | Help | Send Feedback | Contact us | User Agreement | Privacy | About us
Copyright © 2022-2024 "Africa Updates" All rights reserved