WHO seeks Sh14bn drugs for hungry Kenyans, neighbours

With the upcoming rainy season expected to fail, the situation is worsening.

In Summary

•When on the road, communities find it harder to access health care, a service already in short supply following years of underinvestment and conflict.

•Driven by conflict, changes in climate and the Covid-19 pandemic, this region has become a hunger hotspot with disastrous consequences for the health and lives of its people, the organisation said in its appeal.

Residents of Lonyangalani, Marsabit slaughter goats and sheep purchased by government during the ongoing destocking programme on July 3.
Residents of Lonyangalani, Marsabit slaughter goats and sheep purchased by government during the ongoing destocking programme on July 3.
Image: JACK OWUOR

The World Health Organization has appealed for Sh14.7 billion ($123 million) to buy medicines and nutritional supplies for people facing drought in Kenya and neighbouring countries. 

The organisation said more than 80 million people in Kenya, Somalia, Uganda, South Sudan, Ethiopia,  Djibouti and Sudan — are estimated to be food insecure, with upwards of 37.5 million people already selling their possessions in order to feed themselves and their families.

Driven by conflict, changes in climate and the Covid-19 pandemic, this region has become a hunger hotspot with disastrous consequences for the health and lives of its people, the organisation said in its appeal.

“Hunger is a direct threat to the health and survival of millions of people in the greater Horn of Africa, but it also weakens the body’s defences and opens the door to disease,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

“WHO is looking to the international community to support our work on the ground responding to this dual threat, providing treatment for malnourished people, and defending them against infectious diseases.”

The funds will go towards urgent measures to protect lives, including shoring up the capacity of countries to detect and respond to disease outbreaks, procuring and ensuring the supply of life-saving medicines and equipment, identifying and filling gaps in health care provisions, and providing treatment to sick and severely malnourished children. 

With the upcoming rainy season expected to fail, the situation is worsening. There are already reports of avoidable deaths among children and women in childbirth.

"The risk of trauma and injuries is high as violence, including gender-based violence, is on the rise. There are outbreaks of measles in 6 of the 7 countries, against a background of low vaccination coverage," WHO said.

It added that countries are simultaneously fighting cholera and meningitis outbreaks as hygiene conditions have deteriorated, with clean water becoming scarce and people leaving home on foot to find food, water, and pasture for their animals.

The region already has an estimated 4.2 million refugees and asylum seekers, with this number expected to increase as more people are forced to leave their homes. When on the road, communities find it harder to access health care, a service already in short supply following years of underinvestment and conflict.

“Ensuring people have enough to eat is central. Ensuring that they have safe water is central. But in situations like these, access to basic health services is also central,” said Dr Michael Ryan, executive director of WHO’s health emergencies programme.

“Services like therapeutic feeding programmes, primary health care, immunisation, safe deliveries and mother and child services can be the difference between life and death for those caught up in these awful circumstances.”

WHO said it has already released $16.5 million from its Contingency Fund for Emergencies to ensure people have access to health services, treat sick children with severe malnutrition and prevent, detect, and respond to infectious disease outbreaks.

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