Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Member countries of WHO South-East Asia Region pledge to strengthen emergency preparedness

Prone to multiple hazards, member countries of WHO South-East Asia Region have pledged to strengthen emergency preparedness capacities by scaling up risk assessment, increasing investments, and enhancing implementation of multi-sectoral plans.
As member countries adopted the ‘Delhi Declaration - Emergency Preparedness in the South-East Asia Region’ at a Ministerial Round Table in New Delhi, the regional director, Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, underscored the importance of preparedness saying, “stronger the capacities in our own countries, stronger will be the Region and stronger will be the world.”
The WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who connected from Geneva to the Seventy-Second Session of WHO South-East Asia Regional Committee, on the occasion said, “preparedness will save lives, and save money. The Delhi declaration on emergency preparedness is a vital step forward towards making the Region safer for all its people.”
The Delhi declaration calls for four key initiatives – identify risks by mapping and assessing vulnerabilities for evidence-based planning, implement measures for disaster risk reduction; prepare and operationalise readiness.
Invest in people and systems for risk management, by strengthening IHR core capacities, building resilient health systems and infrastructure, surge capacity through national emergency medical teams and rapid response teams. The commitment to invest more, also emphasises on continued and greater support to South-East Asia Regional Health Emergency Fund (SEARHEF)’s preparedness stream.
The declaration also calls for implementing, monitoring, testing and adequately funding national action plans on disaster risk management, emergency preparedness and response.
Lastly, it emphasises on interlinking sectors and networks – suck as the ‘One Health’ approach to bridge the gap between diverse sectors including human, animal, environment – for prevention and control of emerging and remerging diseases.
Participating in the roundtable, ministers of Health and heads of delegations of the 11 Member countries – that accounts for one-fourth of the global population – shared experiences from the numerous health emergencies that have hit the Region in the last over a decade. “We have a lot to share and learn from each other,” the regional director said.
The turning point was the Indian Ocean tsunami that killed over 200,000 people, and caused massive destruction in six countries of the region. The region then set benchmarks for disaster preparedness and response and created the regional health emergency fund SEARHEF that has funded 39 emergencies in 9 countries, disbursing $6.07 million.
Despite improved capacities and responses to health emergencies, WHO South-East Asia continues to be one of the most vulnerable regions at risk of emerging and re-emerging diseases, diseases associated with climate change and rapid and unplanned urbanisation, and natural disasters such as floods, cyclones, earthquakes and volcano eruptions.
Since 2014, the start of the first term of the regional director, scaling up emergency risk capacities has been a regional flagship priority. In her second term that began in 2019 February, the regional director has asked for sustain efforts to strengthen emergency preparedness and response; accelerate investments to address critical gaps at national and sub-national levels; and innovate to continuously improve preparedness and response system.
The Regional flagship is aligned to WHO’s global triple billion goal , one billion more people better protected from health emergencies, one billion more people enjoying better health and wellbeing and one billion more people benefitting from universal health coverage.

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