| 04 Septembre 2018
SANA’A, 3 September 2018 – The World Health Organization (WHO)  airlifted, through several shipments in August, over 500 tons of  essential medicines and medical supplies to Sana’a airport, to be  distributed to affected governorates including Aden and southern  governorates.
 
 Life-saving cargo
 
 These shipments contain critical life-saving anti-cancer drugs to cover  almost 50% of pressing needs of cancer patients for one year. The  shipments also include 100 nutrition kits sufficient to meet the needs  of more than 5000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition with  medical complications for three months, in addition to various types of  rapid diagnostic tests and laboratory reagents to cover the urgent  needs and strengthen the capacity of central laboratories and blood  banks. Medicines to treat non-communicable diseases (NCDs), surgical  instruments, interagency emergency health kits, intravenous (IV) fluids  and various types of medications needed by health facilities across the  country were also among the medical supplies. Likewise, 50 000 rapid  diagnostic tests to effectively diagnose cholera, and 21 trauma kits for  mass casualty management were delivered to Aden from Djibouti port.
 
 “This prolonged war has caused many of the acute health needs to go  unmet, due to severe shortages of life-saving medical supplies, which is  why the arrival of these life-saving cargos has been critical to the  response.” said Dr Nevio Zagaria, WHO Representative to Yemen.
 
 Support to a rapidly deteriorating health system
 
 “Nearly 16.4 million people require assistance to ensure adequate access  to healthcare, and the scale of struggle keeps mounting, with more  people joining the list of sufferings. Chronic diseases, noncommunicable  diseases, malnutrition, and preventable diseases continue to plague  people. Tripling our efforts is not even enough, we need to do the  impossible to relieve the pain of civilians who are facing unimaginable  hardships”.
 
 In Yemen, only 50% of the total health facilities are fully functioning,  and yet these health facilities face severe shortages in medicines,  equipment, and staff due not only to difficulties in importing medicines  and critical supplies, but also to lack of operational funds.
 
 WHO is working hard with its partners to advocate for increased response  to these pressing health needs, and these supplies were successfully  brought to the country thanks to the generous support of the World Bank,  USAID/OFDA, the EU Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations  (ECHO), UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), Germany, Emirates Red  Crescent, King Salman Humanitarian Aid & Relief Center (KSRelief),  UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) and  Japan.
 
 
 WHO Media Team