of the Democratic Republic of the Congo was
supported during a new Ebola virus disease
outbreak in Equateur province.
In March 2022, a new website for volunteers and
managers involved in epidemic risk management
was
launched, providing a peer support and
resources to inform National Society planning
and operations on the ground.
The IFRC’s 2022 Guidance on Law and Public
Health Emergency Preparedness and Response
outlined how domestic laws, policies and
plans can support effective preparedness and
response to public health emergencies – which
National Societies can use to advocate to
strengthen legal frameworks in their countries.
National Societies were also supported
through the IFRC’s evidence-based Global
Care in Communities
packages that were
developed for community health workers to
provide operational guidance on implementing
evidence-based interventions. These focused on
prevention and management of communicable
diseases, neglected tropical diseases and sex-
ual, reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child and
adolescent health, non-communicable diseases
and mental health
and psychosocial support
(MHPSS) in all contexts, including emergency
situations, protracted crises, and fragile settings.
To improve access to primary health care and
immunization, the IFRC received funding from
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in 2022 to
support National Societies in Cameroon, Central
African Republic, Chad, and South Sudan in
addressing the specific vulnerability of nomadic
populations through cross-border polio vaccina-
tion programmes.
The IFRC also supported the delivery of a pack-
age of essential health interventions including
immunization for ‘zero dose’ and conflict-affected
communities in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Central
African Republic, and DRC. Additionally, immu-
nization services were provided to nomadic
populations
in Cameroon, Chad, Central African
Republic and South Sudan as part of integrated
service packages tailored to these communities.
In 2022, the IFRC supported 15 countries on
the African continent to distribute 60 million
insecticide treated bed nets to protect an
estimated 108
million people from malaria, a
leading killer of children aged under five years in
African countries.
As part of the IFRC’s efforts to undergo a dig-
ital transformation and improve reporting to
measure the impact in the quality of health care
and treatment provided, the Red Cross and
Red Crescent Health Information system was
developed and deployed domestically across
National Societies.
One WASH remains the centrepiece of the IFRC’s
approach to ensuring
that vulnerable commu-
nities can access basic water, sanitation, and
hygiene services as part of cross-cutting work to
pandemic prevention, climate change mitigation
and poverty reduction (see box for more details
about One WASH).
In addition, WASH
components were included in
emergency operations such as the hunger crisis
in Africa, Ukraine conflict and weather-related
disasters such as cyclones in Southern Africa
and flooding in Asia.
A notable success in 2022 was IFRC’s innovative
work in the emergency treatment of wastewater.
Based on the success of wastewater treatment
projects utilizing IFRC developed technology,
German emergency management authorities
and military are considering the adoption of the
technology for response preparedness stocks.
The IFRC and network partners are further
developing the technology to ensure predicta-
ble response capacity is available to the WASH
sector as a whole. The first commercial sale of
the technology was completed in late 2022.
Throughout 2022, the IFRC focused on global and
national level resource mobilization to establish
a portfolio of preparedness, prevention, and
coordination programming for cholera elimina-
tion as part of efforts to reduce cholera-related
deaths by 50 per cent.
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