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Health Interventions

The success of national vaccination campaigns depends on how they are, but there are serious concerns that some members of vulnerable communities may be excluded even if they are mentioned on paper.

The COVID-19 pandemic has unveiled the huge challenges and risks health workers are facing globally including health care associated infections, violence, stigma, psychological and emotional disturbances, illness and even death. Furthermore, working in stressful environments makes health workers more prone to errors which can lead to patient harm. Therefore,  focuses on the theme: Health Worker Safety: A Priority for Patient Safety. On 17 September speak up for health workers and share these .

Deafening silence and uncertainty in Afghanistan

Without vaccines, we are at risk of serious illness and disability from diseases like measles, meningitis, tetanus and polio. In today' interconnected world, infectious diseases easily cross borders, infecting anyone who is not vaccinated. Get vaccinated on time, every time.

In the Upper East Region of Ghana, a three-wheeled vehicle makes its way down a bumpy rural road, raising a cloud of red dust behind it. It’s one of 80 ambulances that helps bring medical assistance to communities in some of the most remote parts of the region.

A day in the life of a vaccinator in Mali: Going the distance to reach every child

The aim of World Immunization Week (24-30 April) is to promote the use of vaccines to protect people of all ages against disease. Every year, millions of lives are saved thanks to immunization, one of the most successful and cost-effective health interventions. However, nearly 20 million children are still unvaccinated. With the theme #VaccinesWork for All, the campaign focuses on how vaccines as well as the people who develop, deliver and receive them are vaccine champions.

After working with the government of Liberia during the Ebola epidemic, co-leads the COVID -19 surveillance and contact tracing efforts with the . Contact tracers are urgently being recruited, trained and deployed. They are tasked with identifying contacts of confirmed cases, monitoring for symptoms, and referring cases for testing. They come from the most affected areas and are assigned within their respective communities to also address mistrust and misinformation.

The lengths to which health workers go to reach every child with vaccines

A man helps another put on protective goggles.

With coronavirus transmission on the rise in most Latin American countries, there is a small window of opportunity for Governments to slow the spread of the virus, reduce the impact on health systems and save lives. , the specialized health agency for the Americas that also serves as the regional office of the (WHO), is working with Governments to protect their health personnel. It is vital that countries decide what social distancing measures need to be implemented and for how long.

A peacekeeper attending a woman in East Darfur.

Secretary-General António Guterres paid tribute to UN healthcare personnel who are working to ensure the well-being of UN personnel during the COVID-19 crisis. As of March 2020, the United Nations has 763 healthcare personnel working in various medical facilities around the world, including in headquarters and field offices delivering services to support UN personnel in their vital work. Mr. Guterres expressed his continued support for their efforts, stressing: “I’m entirely behind you.”

People simulating sneezing into their elbows.

±¬ÁĎą«Éç is rushing to protect Africa from the COVID-19 onslaught that would lead to massive losses of lives and unprecedented social and economic damage.   The novel coronavirus is now poised to move fast into the developing world “in a very dangerous way”, and into areas that lack the resources to respond, said . The is calling on the Group of 20 countries to support Africa in an immediate health and human response, to include an emergency economic stimulus to African governments.

appeals to governments and the international community to take urgent action through international cooperation underlining the responsibility of rich countries to help poor nations.  In such emergencies, political decisions need to be grounded in science and guided by ethics.  Collective recognition of the emerging and growing vulnerabilities faced by many is necessary to ensure that health and social policy responses all around the world leave no one behind.

The  has played a crucial role in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic, ever since the first cases were identified in Wuhan in December. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus outlined five ways the agency is leading the global response: helping countries to prepare and respond; providing accurate information; ensuring vital supplies reach frontline health workers; training and mobilizing health workers; coordinating the search for a vaccine.

In a Wuhan hospital, a partnership set unmanned vehicles to transport medical supplies, deliver meals for doctors and patients, and complete other emergency tasks.