Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims

by International Medical Corps
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Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims
Provide Lifesaving Relief to Drought Victims

Project Report | Mar 3, 2017
Drought in Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia

By Kimberly Laney | Resource Development Officer

A mother and her family in search of water
A mother and her family in search of water

A third year of drought in the region has left nearly 13 million people in Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia food insecure, with crops and livestock decimated and food and water prices rising. An estimated 600,000 children under five will be in need of treatment for severe acute malnutrition in the coming year.

Somalia, which has also been ravaged by two decades of conflict, has just declared a state of national emergency. People in northern Somalia are already dying from the drought, and tragically, for many families, it is not the first time they have faced such conditions. Somalia’s 2011 famine killed some 260,000 people, half of whom were children under five, and the current drought has the potential of being the worst in 50 years. The United Nations estimates that more than half the population of Somalia will be in need of humanitarian assistance by June 2017, and more than 270,000 children will be severely malnourished. Thousands of families are on the move in search of food and water, and over the next three months, up to 100,000 Somalis are expected to cross the border into Ethiopia, which is already experiencing its own driest period in decades.

“Half of the population in Somalia—6.2 million people—are in need of assistance,” said Mohamed, International Medical Corps’ Country Director for Somalia. “The drought has wiped out crops and livestock and forced families to sell assets or borrow money to survive. If the response does not scale up, communities in the hardest-hit areas will slide further and further into crisis and people will die—all from causes we could have prevented.”

The government of Kenya has declared the drought a national disaster, with some 2.7 million in need of food aid. Ethiopia and Kenya’s worsening conditions, compounded by the influx of Somali refugees and displacement of people within the countries themselves, are depleting resources and putting a significant strain on existing humanitarian aid. The situation is rapidly deteriorating as food prices are rising, along with livestock deaths and malnutrition rates.

International Medical Corps is now working to meet the rapidly growing and urgent needs of families by scaling up health, nutrition, and water, sanitation and hygiene services throughout the region—expanding programs into drought-affected areas to reach those who are most in need.

In Somalia, International Medical Corps continues to support hospitals, health centers and primary health clinics, helping to ensure they have urgently needed supplies, capacity and technical support to respond to this growing crisis. International Medical Corps’ nutrition care centers in the areas of Abudwak and Balambal saw caseloads increase by 127% between September 2016 and January 2017, and we also offer services in the only stabilization center in Somalia. To meet the urgent need for clean and safe water, in January, our teams also trucked 1.6 million litres of water to drought-affected villages in Somalia, benefitting some 19,000 individuals.

In Ethiopia, we are providing nutrition support to some 105,634 malnourished children and 59,420 malnourished pregnant and lactating women. International Medical Corps also launched emergency seed distribution in some of the worst-affected areas in the East Hararghe Zone to ensure that families have access to food. In the Dollo Ado refugee camps, we are reaching the influx of Somali refugees with nutrition services, and, to meet gaps in response to the critical water shortage, we have rehabilitated 107 water points, supporting some 82,700 individuals in the last year.

In Kenya, to prevent and treat malnutrition International Medical Corps is supporting some 450 health facilities in seven counties, where more than 93,000 children and pregnant and breastfeeding mothers are acutely malnourished. Our work includes strengthening the capacity of the health system to deliver high-quality nutrition services, advocating with the government to increase its commitment to eradicating malnutrition, and educating communities about how malnutrition can be prevented. We are currently training 216 frontline health care workers to manage severe and moderate malnutrition and helping community facilities carry out mass screening campaigns—even in very remote and hard-to-reach areas—to identify cases of malnutrition and connect them to treatment services.

We thank you and the GlobalGiving community for your ongoing support as we provide lifesaving services and care during this critical time of need. 

Our teams are checking nutritional status
Our teams are checking nutritional status
We are working to scale care for those in need
We are working to scale care for those in need
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Organization Information

International Medical Corps

Location: Los Angeles, CA - USA
Website:
Project Leader:
Davis Nordeen
Los Angeles , CA United States

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Combined with other sources of funding, this project raised enough money to fund the outlined activities and is no longer accepting donations.
   

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