| 27 Août 2017
Baghdad, 21 August 2017: As hundreds of people flee the crisis in Telafar, a city west of Mosul,  Iraq, the World Health Organization (WHO) and health partners in  collaboration with Ninewa health authority have established static and  mobile medical clinics (MMCs) to offer 24/7 lifesaving emergency and  primary health care services to meet the urgent needs of people fleeing  the crisis.
 
 The static and mobile clinics have been established in two mustering  points in Buweyr and Musaid as well as in the two screening sites in  Badoush and Scorpion Junction. They will provide round-the-clock health  services such as essential health services. Emergency medical supplies,  trauma, and emergency health kits have also been delivered to the field  hospitals and primary health care centres in Hammam Al-Alil to cope with  the number of people fleeing from the conflict areas . Ninety nine  percent all MMCs in the frontlines are being run by Ninewa Directorate  of Health (DOH) and WHO’s implementing partner DARY. Health services in  Hammam Al Alil screening site have been reactivated.
 
 Drawing from lessons learnt during the Mosul operations, Ninewa DOH, WHO  and trauma partners are scaling up frontline trauma care, establishing  trauma stabilization points (TSPs) and field hospitals at the frontlines  of the crisis and coordinating ambulance for patient transfers so as to cope with the expected increase of trauma patients.
 
 “The DOH, WHO and its partners are on the ground working around the  clock to ensure that IDPs get immediate health care. The majority of  those arriving to the mustering points are exhausted and sick, many have  had limited access to health services for a long time. The exhaustion  from long distances that people have to walk to access the mustering  points have been exacerbated by the soaring temperatures,” says Altaf  Musani, the WHO Country Representative in Iraq.
 
 “Our goal is to save lives. Timely access to emergency trauma and  essential health care services remains a top priority at this point,  hence our efforts to establish additional field hospitals and trauma  stabilisation points on the frontlines,” added Musani.
 
 WHO is working in collaboration with Iraq health authorities, UN agencies and implementing partners.
 
 To ensure adequate coverage of primary health care services including  immunization and trauma care for newly displaced population while  maintaining the emergency response for over 6 million people in need of  urgent humanitarian assistance across Iraq WHO is appealing for urgent  support of $59 million to bridge the current funding gap of 49%.