WHO and partners respond to flood crises in the former Northern Bahr el Ghazal and Upper Nile States of South Sudan
				
							
								
					
				
							
								
					
				
					
						
		| 19 Septembre 2017
18 September 2017, Juba – The World Health Organization (WHO) in  partnership with the Ministry of Health and partners are scaling up the  emergency response in the flood affected areas of Aweil West and Aweil  North Counties of former Norther Bahr el Ghazal State, and Maban County  of former Upper Nile State.
 
 As part of the health cluster response, WHO delivered lifesaving medical  supplies to the communities affected by the heavy rainfall and  subsequent flooding.  The lifesaving health supplies will benefit 10 000  people living in areas deeply affected by the heavy rainfall in parts  Northern Bahr el Ghazal and Upper Nile States of South Sudan for the  next three months.
 
 The supplies include 10 basic unit kits and 10 pneumonia kits for  management of common illness. The supplies were deployed along with  Medical Mobile Team (MMT) to support other health partners in management  of common illnesses to reduce excess mortality and morbidity and build  the capacity of partners in early case detection of outbreak prone  diseases. 
 “Building the capacity of partners, increasing human resource and  medical supplies are vital in such acute emergencies since it increases  access to quality health care services to the affected population” said  Mr Evans Liyosi, WHO Representative a.i to South Sudan. 
 
 According to the State Ministry of Health, it is estimated that over 119  000 people have been affected due to flooding triggered by the heavy  rainfall in 11 payams of Aweil North and Aweil West of former Northern  Bahr el Ghazal State. More flooding also caused some deaths and injuries  and has deeply affected the daily lives of over 650 households in eight  villages of Bunj payam, Maban County, Upper Nile State.
 
 The risk of water-borne disease in the wake of the floods is real; a  cholera epidemic has already affected thousands of people, causing over  355 reported deaths said Dr Allan Mpairwe, WHO Health Security and  Emergency Officer. We have to act very fast to avoid the spread of  water-borne diseases and the transmission of vector-borne diseases such  as malaria, Dr Mpairwe underscored. 
 The floods have also destroyed roads, schools, homes, crops and  vegetables all over the affected areas.  This means the situation will  get worse, with more people needing temporary housing and urgent  humanitarian help.
 
 WHO will continue to strengthen its humanitarian support in coordination  with the Ministry of Health and partners to save the lives of the  vulnerable community, Mr Liyosi added.






