| 26 Avril 2018
24 April, Cairo/Geneva -- As the  international community comes together in Brussels to show support for  Syrians and for a political solution to the conflict, WHO calls for  increased investments in health to protect the lives of almost 17  million vulnerable men, women and children inside Syria and in 5 major  neighbouring countries.
 
 Every day, Syrians are dying of conditions that are easily treatable.  Inside the country, critical shortages, insecurity and disrupted systems  have left millions of people in need of health aid. Meanwhile, Syrians  who have fled to neighbouring countries find themselves just as  vulnerable, with the vast majority living below the poverty line and  unable to afford life-saving health care.
 
 Syrians at risk due to ongoing health crisis
 
 Seven years into the crisis have left 11.3 million people inside Syria  in need of life-saving and life-sustaining humanitarian health aid,  while fewer than half of all public health facilities are fully  operational. Indiscriminate attacks on health care continue; in 2018  alone, there have been 8 health workers killed or injured and 74  verified attacks on health facilities.
Throughout the country, people are unable  to obtain basic, life-saving health care services without being exposed  to significant risks on a daily basis. These include almost 2.3 million  people in hard-to-reach and besieged areas. Hundreds of seriously ill  and wounded people living in besieged areas have been denied the right  to leave to obtain life-saving health care. Many of them have died as a  result.
 
 Newly accessible areas are often contaminated with explosive hazards,  and those who chose to return to their homes may be more at risk of  injuries, exacerbated by the lack of basic health care services in many  areas of return.
Refugees overburdening health systems in host countries
 
 For almost 6 million Syrian refugees across the Region, the living  situation continues to be extremely challenging. Many refugees face  psychosocial and physical effects of war and displacement and are in  need for primary, secondary and tertiary health care. National health  systems across the Region continue to be the primary responders to those  health needs, however, access continues to be limited, not only due to  overwhelmed and under-funded health systems, but also due to the  financial limitations of the refugees themselves.
 
 In addition to millions of Syrian refugees affected by the crisis, an  additional 4 million host community members are also affected by the  refugee crisis, and in need of aid. In Turkey, where integration of  Syrian health care workers into national health systems is well  established, language and cultural barriers remain a challenge.
 
 Within the context of the Brussels conference on Syria and the Region  WHO emphasizes that health is a human right that must be respected by  all parties to the conflict, that the attacks on health workers and  facilities must stop, and that there must be adequate investment in the  health sector of both Syria and neighbouring host countries. The people  of Syria cannot have a future without proper health care.
 
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 As part of the 2018 Humanitarian Response Plan for Syria, WHO and  health partners require US$ 426.4 m to reach 11.3 million people across  the country with life-saving health care services. Of this amount, WHO  requires US$ 143 million. To address the health needs of more than 5.3  million Syrian refugees and almost 4 million host community members  affected by the Syrian refugee crisis, the health and nutrition sector  requires US$ 294 million as part of the Regional Refugee and Resilience  Plan for 2018-2019.