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Health Sector Response to Floods in North

Health Sector Response to Floods in North. Dr Amofah GK Deputy Director General Ghana Health Service. Background. Heavy rains and spillage of water way from Burkina Faso in August and September 2007 leading to flooding in parts of 3 northern regions. Potential health effects of flooding.

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Health Sector Response to Floods in North

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  1. Health Sector Response to Floods in North Dr Amofah GK Deputy Director General Ghana Health Service

  2. Background • Heavy rains and spillage of water way from Burkina Faso in August and September 2007 leading to flooding in parts of 3 northern regions

  3. Potential health effects of flooding • Displacement of people leading to overcrowding • Destruction of health facilities or rendering them inaccessible • Worsening insanitary conditions with pollution of water supply and food leading to potential increase in water-related diseases such as malaria, diarrhoea diseases including cholera, dysentary, typhoid and hepatitis A • Destruction of food crops leading to acute and chronic malnutrition • Potential worsening of Guinea Worm situation due to contamination of artificially created ponds as flood water recedes

  4. Actual health effects • Damaged health facilities • NR: 3 facilities damaged • UER: 21 CHPS compounds/feeding rehabs damaged; erosion of landscape • UWR: No health facility damaged • Facilities rendered inaccessible • In the Northern region, 6 facilities in West Mamprusi, 5 in Tolon Kumbungu, 1 in Kushegu Kraga, 1 in West Gonja, in Saboba Cheriponi and 1 in Central Gonja were cut off. • UWR: Bawiesebele H/C in Sissala East and Goh CHPS Zone in Wa East districts cut off • UER : similar situation

  5. Disease Profile • All epidemic prone-diseases such as CSM, cholera, Yellow fever and measles are being monitored countrywide weekly, with special focus on the 3 northern regions. • So far, as at October ending, no outbreak of any of these diseases has occurred.

  6. Health sector response • Intensification of Surveillance • Preparedness plans activated • Alert circulated • Essential supplies moved up north • Monitoring of epidemic prone diseases • 3 northern regions did rapid appraisal and submitted needs to HQ for assistance • On 25-28 September 2007, visit of the Honourable Minister of Health and his team to parts of the Northern and Upper East regions. • Establishment of Health Sector Flood Committee on 24 September 2007 to coordinate response

  7. Response • Assessment of the water and sanitation situation and needs in Tamale and its environs with UNICEF, CDC etc • ICC on Guinea Worm meeting to assess GW situation and prepare for eventualities • Initial funds released to support GW preparedness • Based on plans submitted by regions, amount of GHC100,000 processed for initial operational activities like IEC, orientation of staff etc • Details of actual infrastructural requirements being developed • Nutritional support with food from WFP and nutritional assessment on-going

  8. Threat of CSM outbreak • Potential outbreak of CSM • Emergence of a hyper virulent Neisseria meningitidis sero group A subgroup III/ST2859 clone in the country for the first time • 8-12 year cyclical CSM epidemic in ‘meningitis belt’, last epidemic in 1996/1997 making 2007/8 special • Displacement of people and overcrowding due to floods • Situation expected to worsen with CAN 2008 in January-February 2008

  9. Actions • Preventive mass vaccination before end of year depending on availability of vaccines • Main challenge is access to limited vaccines at global level • Intensification of surveillance activities, including monitoring of alert/epidemic thresholds plus reactive vaccination as indicated • Orientation of staff plus other preparedness activities

  10. Provisional Estimate of need • A total budget of GHC4,958,465.00 is required for health response to flood including CSM threat • Regional response and re-building plans; • Northern region = GH¢ 895,500.00 • Upper- East region = GH¢949,500.00 • Upper-West region = GH¢169,579.00 (excluding re-building) • CSM vaccines = GH¢ 1,400,000.00 • CSM campaign = GH¢ 1,360,386.00 • Surveillance and epidemic = GH¢83,500.00 preparedness and response • Supervision and Monitoring = GH¢100,000.00

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