IOM LIBERIA 25 March 2015—13 April 2015 SITUATION REPORT No. 4 | 16 April 2015 HIGHLIGHTS Case Management Nurse Celestine Olale administers medicine to patients at the mobile clinic in Zameyan Town. © IOM Bringing Health Care Closer to Communities As the rainy season approached, Nurse Princess Nyumah the Officer in Charge of Zameyan Town’s nearest clinic 7 kilometers away in Beafinie, was filled with a sense of foreboding. She explains, “When the raining starts we have more cases of malaria, diarrhea and acute respiratory infection.” However, since the outbreak of Ebola, the clinic has received a markedly low number of patients, compounded by its distance from communities. “During the rainy season, it is even more difficult for people to walk for one and a half hours to the clinic,” Nurse Princess expounds. - IOM is performing clinical and operational management of three Ebola Treatment Units (ETUs) in three counties in Liberia: - Tubmanburg, Bomi County - Buchanan, Grand Bassa County - Sinje, Grand Cape Mount County. Since opening, 131 patients have been admitted to 3 ETUs, 12 Survivors have been discharged and there have been 15 EVD related deaths. - IOM is supporting the transition of responsibility of EVD healthcare services to County Health Teams (CHTs). IOM is progressively reducing ETU operations while continuing to support to health system revitalization and conduct community outreach activities. Tubmanburg ETU, Bomi County and Buchanan ETU, Grand Bassa County will be closing to patients on April 15th 2015 Watch In response to this situation, and in support of government efforts to restore health services, IOM now runs mobile clinics within communities such as Zameyan Town, bringing essential health care closer to communities.” Read on “We have some cases here that are serious. We have older people who are sick and have been waiting for this time because of the distance to the clinic. Thank you for this work and for bringing us medicine.” Armah Golee, Sub Chief, Zarmeyan In this video, an Ebola survivor shares her experience of treatment at the Sinje ETU and reintegration into her community in Camp 3, Grand Cape Mount County. IOM Liberia Ebola Response Situation Report │ 15 April 2015 Surveillance, Coordination and Capacity Building Infection Prevention and Control staff conduct health screening at checkpoints and border crossing points. Working at the Borders to Maintain Zero At Bo Waterside, the main entry and exit points between Sierra Leone and Liberia, a steady flow of a diverse profile of travellers can be seen going through the screening booths. Within thirty minutes, a team of border officers and health staff screen a group of students travelling to Monrovia for a conference and a stream of heavy-laden women crossing the border for small-scale trade. Sherlyn Jargbah, one of the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization (BIN) Officers, describes this scene as “business as usual”. However, while the individuals and reasons for crossing the border remain the same, Sherlyn points out a difference she attributes to the focus on maintaining zero new Ebola cases and related changes in border management. “People in the border towns have no travel documents and intermarry so they used to cross freely from Tienii to Kenema because we know them.” she explains, “Now they have to stop for the health check and we fill in the required forms to help us track people and share information with the Ministry of Health.” Read on “This is making a difference because we ask people crossing the border if they have fever or headache, care for a sick person or attended a burial. If they have a high fever ask them to wait and if it does not drop we coordinate with health authorities for secondary screening to take place..” Yassah Gbelee, IPC Monitor, Bo Waterside Entry Point “We receive patients from them [the border points] with their complaints and history. Before we give any treatment we make sure their temperature drops, if it does not we call the ETU hotline.” Fanta Sherif, Nurse, Bo Community Clinic - To support the CHT and border officials’ efforts of ensuring safety of travellers, IOM is conducting health screening services at Bo Waterside – the major crossing point between Liberia and Sierra Leone. Between the 1st and 10th of April, IOM screened more than 12,330 travellers at the border crossing point. - IOM has been leading orientation sessions of border officials (including Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization and Liberia National Police) on EVD border protocols, developed by the Border Coordination Group. IOM has conducted trainings in 4 border districts in Liberia – 24 officials were trained in GCM, 42 in Nimba, 37 in Lofa and 31 in Gbarpolu. - IOM is supporting surveillance at other border crossing points in Grand Cape Mount County and is assisting in triage construction for health screening at 4 official crossing points. In addition, IOM is constructing triages at 3 county checkpoints in GCM and Bomi, which IOM assists also with monitoring. - Since March 25th, IOM has supported CHTs to conduct active case finding and EVD awareness activities at 3 markets in GCM and 2 with CHTs to conduct community outreach and active case finding in communities. Over the last 14 days, 3 communities in GCM and 4 in Bomi were visited by IOM outreach teams providing WASH and IPC training as well as EVD prevention and awareness. Social Mobilization - Social mobilizers at the county and district level trained by IOM have provided training to gCHVs, as well as conducted monitoring of their work on promoting EVD awareness. Since March 25th, 15 community leaders, 81 gCHVs in Grand Cape Mount and 60 gCHVs in Grand Bassa have received training on EVD prevention and ETU awareness. IOM Liberia Ebola Response Situation Report │ 15 April 2015 Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of UNMEER speaking at the training on EVD Border protocols held in Gbarpolu © 2015 “At zero you are at the most critical point and it is important to maintain the zero [cases]. We have realized there is no way you can enforce by closing borders because communities will find ways of going around. We can always turn a crisis into an opportunity... It is about the whole border control and the element of free movement of population so that we can make sure we have proper surveillance.” Meet Fata: Personally and Professionally Involved - Between March 25th and April 10th IOM Social Mobilizers, IOM ETU staff members and CHT representatives participated in 4 radio talk shows in Bomi, 1 in Grand Bassa, and 5 in Grand Cape Mount. Talk show topics include raising awareness of mobile clinics, back to school EVD prevention, and safe burial practices. - gCHVs in Grand Bassa have begun conducting community outreach activities using communication tools, such as comic books for education purposes – 1,520 community members benefited from this during the week. Listen “Give me love; Show me care; I am like you again; I am a survivor.” In this interview, a 38 year old woman from Grand Bassa County shares her personal story of surviving Ebola and returning to her community. IOM is partnering with the Ministry of Health to share the stories of Ebola survivors over the radio in Bomi, Grand Cape Mount and Grand Bassa counties to tackle stigma within communities. The programmes are used to debunk myths about Ebola, treatment units and life with survivors as well as promote positive behavior. Essential Services Revitalization “As a Liberian and as part of IOM, I feel very proud to be part of the process helping to eradicate the virus” Fata Konneh, Logistics and Procurement Assistant, IOM Liberia © IOM 2015 During the week, Fata Konneh works as a key member of the team equipping staff and operations in Monrovia, Bomi, Grand Cape Mount and Grand Bassa counties. When she is not making IOM’s Ebola response activities possible, Fata also spends time educating members of her community and children at her daughter’s school to embrace and promote positive health behaviour. “I tell children that this situation is not only for big people and they can participate by telling each other. I make everyone understand that we should always abide by Ministry of Health rules and guidelines to avoid another Ebola outbreak,” she explains. - IOM conducts mobile clinics in communities that lack access to basic health care. Mobile clinics provide much needed primary care, vaccination and de-worming services to communities. Since March 25th, 200 patients have been provided with medical services in 2 locations in GCM and 598 patients were treated at 5 locations in Bomi. - Within the framework of the back to schools campaign, IOM has trained teachers, principals, parents, and teacher associations on wash and IPC protocols. Over the last two weeks, the ETUs’ WASH and IPC teams in the three counties have been monitoring the status of implementation of the safe school protocols. I27 schools in GCM and 8 schools in Grand Bassa were monitored – the first round of monitoring of schools in Grand Bassa is now complete. IOM Liberia Ebola Response Situation Report │ 15 April 2015 Dashboard November 2014 - April 2015 TOTAL GRAND CAPE MOUNT BOMI GRAND BASSA Case Management # of ETUs operational 3 1 1 1 6 5 14 6 3 0 10 8 Surveillance, Coordination and Capacity Building # of communities that receive IOM visits for ACF # of markets and checkpoints supported 23 11 Psychosocial Support and Survivor Follow up # of protection cases identified and referred to CHTs 23 5 Social Mobilization # of persons trained # of persons reached 1,564 46,424 852 10,824 462 29,160 250 6,440 56 1,571 4 134 19 852 2 0 19 200 2 134 18 465 0 0 Essential Services Revitalization # of health facilities assessed # of patient consultations by IOM mobile clinics # of Border Crossing Points or Checkpoints supported # of border officials trained in health screening Funding for IOM Liberia Ebola Response For more information on IOM’s Ebola Response in Liberia Please contact: iomliberiapsu@iom.int Visit our website: liberia.iom.int like us on Facebook provided by
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