| 18 Septembre 2017
 
18 September 2017 – In response to the critical health  needs of internally displaced people (IDPs) in Ar-Raqqa governorate in  north-east Syria, the World Health Organization (WHO) has delivered more  than 7 tons of medicines and emergency medical supplies to Al-Tabqa  national hospital.
 
 The shipment includes medicines and supplies for trauma care, diarrhoeal  diseases, and noncommunicable diseases, as well as x-ray machines,  ventilators, electrocardiographs, ultrasound machine and wheelchairs.  The medical supplies are sufficient to treat more than 16 000 patients  and 100 trauma cases.
 
 As a result of mass displacement in Ar Raqqa governorate following  escalating violence, more than half of the 180 000 people now residing  Al-Tabqa city are internally displaced. Patients with diabetes,  hypertension and other chronic illnesses are unable to obtain needed  life-saving essential medicines, and access to health facilities is  limited due to extreme insecurity and damages to some health facilities.
 
 Al-Tabqa national hospital was partially damaged in February 2017. With  support from WHO, the emergency department was recently reopened to  provide life-saving services to people affected by the ongoing conflict  in north-east Syria. Supplies of medicines and medical equipment from  WHO will also help facilitate the re-functioning of a number of other  departments in the hospital, including the internal medicine and  pediatric sections.
 
 “WHO is committed to supporting health facilities in Ar Raqqa  governorate to provide all displaced people, including those in the  hardest-to-reach areas, with access to health services through the  provision of emergency lifesaving medicines,” said Elizabeth Hoff, WHO  Representative in Syria.
 
 WHO has so far provided medicines sufficient for more than 600 000  treatments as part of its response in north-east Syria in 2017.
 
 In light of the critical humanitarian situation in eastern and  north-eastern regions of Syria, WHO is grateful for the recent support  received from the Government of Japan, Qatar Charity and the United  Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID). A funding gap  of US$ 10 million remains, impeding WHO’s ability to fully meet the  immediate health needs of affected people in Ar-Raqqa, Deir-ez-Zor and  Al-Hassakeh governorates.
 
 "WHO’s top priority is to help save lives of the injured and provide  lifesaving medicines for patients with chronic diseases, as well as  prevent sickness among thousands of children women and men who need  health assistance in this crisis,” Hoff added