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Yemen's war-scarred hospitals gear up to combat coronavirus threat

Published Apr 16, 2020 12:00 am
By Reuters TAIZ/SANAA - In a hospital in the Yemeni city of Taiz, medics scarred by five years of war are marshalling scant resources to face a new enemy. The coronavirus epidemic has yet to make clear inroads in Yemen, with the little testing that has been done uncovering just one confirmed case. But aid groups fear that could be a harbinger of a catastrophic outbreak among an acutely malnourished population. Nurses receive training on using ventilators, recently provided by the World Health Organization, at the intensive care ward of a hospital allocated for coronavirus patients in preparation for any possible spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Sanaa, Yemen April 8, 2020. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah Nurses receive training on using ventilators, recently provided by the World Health Organization, at the intensive care ward of a hospital allocated for coronavirus patients in preparation for any possible spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Sanaa, Yemen April 8, 2020. (REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah/FILE PHOTO/MANILA BULLETIN) “Even now, before corona arrives ... you would fail to find a ventilator,” said Abdulaziz Qassem, part of the coronavirus team at the city’s Joumhuriya hospital. “We doctors don’t have any protective clothing and we will be the first line of defence.” Yemen’s third largest city has just four ventilators to treat victims of the respiratory disease, and Joumhuriya’s deputy director Khalil al-Saeed said its makeshift coronavirus wing has no beds and no functioning bathrooms. It is one of 37 Yemeni hospitals that the World Health Organization (WHO) and local authorities are rushing to upgrade, in response to a war that has destroyed health, water and sanitation systems and left millions weakened by poverty and disease. “We will all struggle to provide adequate levels of supportive care to people should the disease take off,” the WHO’s emergencies expert Mike Ryan said on Monday. DISPLACED AND ISOLATED “If the rich countries have not been able to deal with corona, how are we expected to,” fretted labourer Abdurrahman Farid, 22, in Aden. Nurses receive training on using ventilators, recently provided by the World Health Organization, at the intensive care ward of a hospital allocated for coronavirus patients in preparation for any possible spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Sanaa, Yemen April 8, 2020. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah The southern port is the temporary seat of the government backed by a Saudi-led coalition. Its main enemy, Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi group, holds the capital Sanaa. The fighting, and economic collapse, have displaced nearly four million people, many to cramped camps with no running water. Hasina Ali, in her fifties, lives under canvas amid bombed-out buildings in al-Kara’a camp, north of Aden. “Neither the state nor organizations are helping us. How are we to just sit inside the camp? There are so many of us,” she said as children fetched water from tanks pasted with coronavirus awareness posters. Around 80% of Yemen’s population, or 24 million people, require humanitarian aid. Of particular concern are remote areas, where acute malnutrition is rife. “It will be difficult to respond if the outbreak reaches rural areas, where health facilities barely exist and there is little or no possibility of testing,” Médecins Sans Frontières said. VENTILATOR SHORTAGE The medical charity said inadequate testing was probably why Yemen was one of the last countries to register the virus. Recently arrived kits mean a few thousand can now get tested in three cities, and the WHO is leveraging reporting networks previously used to track cholera and polio outbreaks to investigate rumours of coronavirus cases. Ventilators are also in short supply nationally, at a few hundred. “Ventilation is going to be a major, major challenge, and not just the ventilators but more the technicians to run (them),” the WHO’s Ryan said. In Sanaa’s Kuwait hospital, which is training intensive care nurses from other provinces in respiratory medicine, workers slap cement on walls for a coronavirus wing. Dozens of rusty oxygen tanks are lined up to be connected to an air network. Head respiratory nurse Samira al-Rukhami said seven of their 20 ventilators needed minor repairs and eight need renovating. “If they get fixed, they will be the main pillar of the hospital,” she said, adding that if needed they could hook more than one patient up to each.
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