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Weakened by war and floods, Yemen fights twin health threat

by Saeed Al-Batati | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 14 May 2020 09:00 GMT

Vendors sell food at the Sharej street market in Mukalla, Yemen, April 26, 2020. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Saeed Al-Batati

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Already on the brink of collapse, the country's health system is seeing a surge in flood-linked illnesses and rising COVID-19 cases

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By Saeed Al-Batati

MUKALLA, Yemen, May 14 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - In a crowded street in southern Yemen's port city of Mukalla, people move between food vendors, buying what they need for iftar, a daily fast-breaking meal eaten during the holy month of Ramadan.

Not far from this market, in the neighbouring town of al-Sheher, Yemen's first case of COVID-19 was reported on April 10.

Yet, as customers do their shopping in Mukalla, there is no sign of the global coronavirus pandemic.

Nobody keeps their distance and there isn't a mask in sight. Food sellers handle raw meat, swat at flies and exchange cash without wearing gloves.

Like many locals, Mohammed al-Jumahi, who sells salted fish in the market, is not convinced the virus is a serious threat - despite posters everywhere telling people to practice social distancing and wash their hands.

But if an outbreak were to happen in Mukalla, the capital of the southern province of Hadhramout, he knows his town would be brought to its knees, he said.

"As you can see, if the virus occurs here, it would spread so quickly," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation as he sliced fish for a customer using bare hands.

Crippled by civil war, severe food shortages and now a wave of diseases linked to recent heavy rains, Yemen's shattered healthcare system is being pushed to the brink of collapse by these pressures and the novel coronavirus, health experts warn.

In late April, the separatist Southern Transitional Council (STC) declared self-rule in the country's south, including Aden, the interim seat of the Saudi-backed government, saying it wanted to take control of efforts to mitigate the damage from floods and curb the coronavirus spread.

Doctors in Aden said the move has worsened Yemen's problems, setting back a truce between the STC and the internationally recognised government that was meant to focus both sides on ending the conflict with the Iran-aligned Houthi movement.

Yemen has announced 72 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus and 13 deaths, according to a Reuters tally.

But health experts believe the real number of cases is far higher, given the lack of tracking and testing capabilities in the poorest country in the Arabian Peninsula.

Sources told Reuters this week that there has been apparent under-counting in both the north and south of the country.

"This is only the tip of the iceberg," said Abdulla Bin Ghouth, professor of community medicine and epidemiology at Hadhramout University's College of Medicine.

Finding out the true numbers affected requires medical know-how and resources beyond the reach of Yemen's health system, which depends heavily on international organisations for funding, equipment and staff, he said.

"The capacity of the Yemeni health system ... to carry out active surveillance is so weak," he said, predicting the country would soon see a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases.

A vendor sells food at the Sharej street market in Mukalla, Yemen, April 26, 2020. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Saeed Al-Batati

FIGHTING AND FLASH FLOODS

More than five years of fighting between the Houthis, the STC and the government in Aden have left Yemen's population of 30 million increasingly vulnerable to disease, injury and death.

Since January, intense rain storms and flash floods have created ideal conditions for the spread of mosquito-borne diseases, including dengue fever, putting even more pressure on the country's fragile healthcare system.

"There has been a surge in the number of fever deaths since the rains," Farooq Q. Naji, director of the epidemics unit at the government-run al-Jumhuriyah hospital in Aden, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In the past month alone, his hospital has received hundreds of patients with dengue and viral fevers, resulting in dozens of deaths. Before the rains came, he was seeing about three cases a day, he said.

"On the streets, there are still rain swamps mixed with garbage, making them breeding grounds for mosquitoes," he added.

Doctors say the spike in dengue cases is disrupting efforts aimed at fighting the spread of the novel coronavirus.

"We have been forced to send home some patients who show signs of recovery as we are running out of beds," said Abha Abdullah Baowaidan, director of Mukalla Maternity and Childhood Hospital.

It has received more than 6,000 cases of fever in its emergency room in the past two months, the doctor noted.

The country's hospitals are also suffering from a shortage of testing kits and other equipment, making it difficult - if not impossible - to know whether a patient is infected with COVID-19 or something else, say health professionals.

Naji at al-Jumhuriyah hospital recalled a case in April when a patient came in with severe respiratory symptoms.

The rapid response team that had been dispatched to test the patient for the new coronavirus was out of swabs and had to travel to another province to find some.

By the time they returned three hours later, the patient had died and at least two hospital workers had been infected with the virus, Naji said.

'BAND TOGETHER'

As war, intense rains and widespread disease have increased the burden on Yemen's critically under-funded health system, the coronavirus pandemic now threatens to push it over the edge.

"The war and climate change have created a humanitarian crisis," said Bin Ghouth, the epidemiologist.

"Many powerful countries with strong health systems have collapsed against the disease. I do not think the Yemeni health system is able to protect its people."

On May 5, Minister of Health Nasser Baoum appealed in a televised speech to international aid agencies to provide Yemen's healthcare workers with personal protective gear, funds and equipment.

Naji said health professionals like himself worry that political tensions and continued fighting are a distraction from efforts to stop the spread of COVID-19.

He called on all sides to set aside their differences and focus on tackling the threat in a unified effort.

"I would like to urge politicians to band together to fight coronavirus. The disease does not distinguish between a president and ordinary people," he said.

Read more:

Next risk? Coronavirus pandemic underscores climate health threats

In storm-hit Yemen, 'sin' is blamed for surging climate losses

From Yemen to South Sudan, climate and water stress seen worsening conflict

Coronavirus and climate change

(Reporting by Saeed Al-Batati; editing by Jumana Farouky and Megan Rowling. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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