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Somalia: As cases soar, clinics, hospitals, and prisons brace themselves for COVID-19

COVID-19 cases are rising sharply in Somalia as clinics, hospitals, prisons, and communities brace themselves for what could be a surge in people falling sick to the virus.

COVID-19 cases are rising sharply in Somalia as clinics, hospitals, prisons, and communities brace themselves for what could be a surge in people falling sick to the virus. 

Over 500 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Somalia, mostly in and around the capital Mogadishu, since the first case was confirmed six weeks ago. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) fears that the true caseload could be much higher, and more people will likely get sick in the coming weeks.

“We are concerned about the increased number of cases and unfortunately, we consider we haven’t seen the peak and we will still see a large number of cases being confirmed in the coming weeks,” said Ana Maria Guzman, the health coordinator for ICRC in Somalia.

Somalia’s health care system has been gutted by decades of violence and underinvestment. Only 50 percent of people in urban areas are estimated to have access to medical care. This drops to just 15 percent in rural areas. Intensive care capacity is limited at best and most hospitals lack regular electricity supply, let alone ventilators.

“People are dying,” said Dr. Mohamed Yusuf, the director of Madina Hospital in Mogadishu. “Deaths are being reported in the different regions—people who didn’t come from abroad and are locals. I think you can imagine how short a time it’s taken for the disease to spread…The problem that exists is that we don’t have enough equipment to respond to the problem. Today in Mogadishu, there is no place that you can say is ready.”

Hospitals and clinics in Somalia are racing to put in place preventive measures against COVID-19 such as temperature checks and handwashing at entrances and triage systems to ensure suspected cases are quickly isolated. However, at nearly 50 cases being confirmed a day in the last week, what capacity exists to treat severe cases will quickly be overrun.

The challenges of curbing the spread of COVID-19 in Somalia are immense. Conflict and climate shocks have uprooted hundreds of thousands of Somalis from their homes. Many of them live in overcrowded displacement camps or shoulder-to-shoulder in overcrowded settlements around urban areas. Physical distancing is impossible, and many do not have soap or water to wash their hands regularly. This creates fertile conditions for the virus to spread.

While COVID-19 threatens the health of communities in Somalia, it also poses a tremendous risk to those living in the country’s detention facilities. As is the case in displacement camps and densely populated urban neighbourhoods, physical distancing and handwashing are luxuries that prisoners cannot practice.

The ICRC recently provided soap and other hygiene and sanitation equipment to prisons around the country to prevent COVID-19. Ali Ahmed is one of the detainees in Mogadishu Central Prison who the ICRC trained in COVID-19 prevention. 

“Following the outbreak, we have been shown how to wash our hands and I took part and understood it,” Ali said. “Now that supplies were given to us, inside are my brothers, [and] I’ll show them how to use them. I’ll show them how to wash your hands when you’re entering the room…And we pray to God to prevent us from the disease, so it doesn’t come here.”

Operational notes on ICRC’s work in Somalia:

·         ICRC has helped 29 primary health care clinics in Jubaland, South West State, Hirshabelle and Galmudug, to establish triage systems where people can be screened for COVID-19. At the same time, in coordination with health authorities, ICRC is supporting contact tracing through its community call centre, with cases currently being traced in Banadir, Baidoa, Kismayo, Bardhere, and Ceel Wak.

·         In Baidoa, Madina, and Keysaney hospitals, the ICRC is helping with tents to create isolation and treatment facilities for COVID-19 for moderate and severe cases (except the 5% of cases that would need ventilators) as well as providing personal protective equipment and other medical supplies.

·         The ICRC and the Somali Red Crescent have hosted nearly than 20,000 health promotion sessions on COVID-19, reaching more than 185,000 people in Banadir, Lower Juba, Gedo, Hiran, Lower Shabelle, Middle Shabelle, and Galgadud. Nearly 140,000 pieces of soap have also been distributed to communities.

·         ICRC teams have delivered 5,000 pieces of soap, 100 handwashing stations, 36,000 laundry soaps, and 9,000 kg of washing powder and other cleaning materials to 22 places of detention in Somalia. Teams also shared information with detainees and prison authorities on how to curb the spread of COVID-19.

For further information, please contact:

Mohamed Abdikarim, ICRC Somalia, +254 770 171 756

Crystal Wells, ICRC Nairobi, +254 716 897 265

SHOTLIST

Location: Mogadishu, Somalia

Language: English, Somali

Length: 15:09

Format: mp4, h.264

Camera: Ismail Taxta, Abdikarim Mohamed

Editor: Abdikarim Mohamed

Filming date: 11th, 12th, 14th and 15th of April

Copyright: ICRC access all

B-Roll
Somalia AV Newsroom
Duration : 15m 9s
Size : 546.5 MB

Documents
20200429 Somalia COVID19
Size: 88.1 KB

2020 05 05 Somalia AV News COVID19 SOMALI
Size: 86.3 KB

200696 Somalia AV News COVID19 fr FINAL
Size: 79.7 KB

20200429 Somalia COVID19 AR (003) with change
Size: 82.1 KB

Maps
Mogadishu

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