Progress in 2022
In 2022, the IFRC took the lead in many inno-
vative approaches to improving and protecting
community health and wellbeing. These included
the promotion of early and anticipatory action for
hazards related to health and water, sanitation
and hygiene (WASH), digital health initiatives, and
guiding evidence-based emergency health and
WASH components of IFRC response operations.
The IFRC continued
to support major ongoing
initiatives, such as REACH, the African Union’s
Community Healthcare Workforce programme
with the African Centre for Disease Control (see
Spotlight for more information on the REACH
initiative).
The organization also pressed for concerted
action to end cholera worldwide, and promoted
the vital role played by community-based work-
ers and volunteers in delivering
a range of critical
public health services.
The IFRC worked throughout the year to support
National Societies in strengthening their auxil-
iary role to support their relevant country-level
public health strategies, advocacy and policy
platforms and mechanisms.
The humanitarian needs resulting from the
decrease in global routine immunization cover-
age due to the COVID-19 pandemic did not abate
in 2022. The IFRC was involved with improving
routine
immunizations for children, and out-
break response for vaccine-preventable diseases
and rolling out COVID-19 specific vaccinations, all
of which required risk communication and com-
munity engagement, epidemic
control and public
health interventions, and livelihoods support
to encourage an inclusive, resilient, and green
recovery from the pandemic.
The IFRC provided more than 7.6 million people
in cohort or home isolation with material support
and reached more than 970 million people with
health and hygiene activities related to COVID-19.
At the same time, the IFRC worked to influence
global
debates about public health, in particular
in applying lessons from COVID-19 into laws,
policies and plans for prevention and prepared-
ness for future epidemics and pandemics.
The IFRC also strengthened
and advocated for
its critical role in preventing, detecting, and
responding
to diseases and health threats, and
the need to empower and work alongside at-risk
communities and local actors.
This work to boost epidemic and pandemic pre-
vention, preparedness, readiness, and response
was conducted throughout the year with com-
munities,
National Societies, and a broad range
of partners.
Through the Community Epidemic and Pandemic
Preparedness Programme, National Societies
in Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Guinea, Kenya, Sierra Leone,
Uganda
and Indonesia strengthened their capacities
and positioning with regards to public health
emergencies risk management. And all 25 coun-
tries involved in the innovative Programmatic
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