Cameroon ,
CAR ,
Chad , and
South Sudan , nearly 300,000 people,
of which more than 70,000 were children under
the age of five, were reached with vaccinations.
For WASH, the Expanded Programme of
Immunization (EPI) project in the
Democratic Republic of Congo was implemented with the
support of the IFRC and with funding from USAID.
The aim was to increase the immunization cover-
age rate to 90 per cent and improve community
knowledge, skills and practices on immunization.
The programme also focused on the treatment
of water for domestic use. As a result, more than
355,000 cubic metres of water was treated with
chlorine for household-use.
In
Ghana , 14 water supply schemes served
6,200 households (37,200 people). These sys-
tems also generated income from the sale of
water for future operation and maintenance
needs.
Afghan Red Crescent Society , together
with the IFRC, continuously worked with the
Ministry of Education to establish water points
and toilets for boys and girls, menstrual hygiene
management facilities, and handwashing sta-
tions in schools in Afghanistan.
Health care interventions with the IFRC’s sup-
port were developed in a variety of contexts
across the world, from crises to healthy ageing
promotion. In
Venezuela , through the project
“Enhancing resilience to food crises in semi-arid
rural and peri-urban areas”, more than 15,000
people were reached through nutritional health
days, distribution of nutritional items, nutritional
workshops and breastfeeding clubs. In
Pakistan ,
the IFRC supported the National Society and its
Basic Health Units, reaching more than 42,000
people in the Bannu district.
In
Syria , the National Society continued the
provision of primary health care services to vul-
nerable people, the displaced and people with
disabilities. At a time of increasing dependency
on SARC to access health care consultations
and medicine, health care facilities were sup-
ported by the IFRC, in fixed or mobile facilities,
reaching more than 87,000 people, including the
cholera response. Moreover, 8,000 people with
disabilities living in hard-to-reach areas received
multidisciplinary health and rehabilitation,
improving their daily autonomy. In
Afghanistan ,
the IFRC supported the installation of 11 mobile
health teams in Kandahar and Paktika provinces.
These reached more than 48,000 people with
primary health and immunization services.
Other cholera outbreaks were supported by the
IFRC, for example, in
Nepal , in the Kathmandu
valley, through preventive activities to control
cholera, diarrhea and dengue cases, reaching
more than 33,000 people.
Training those who help people is one of the
IFRC’s cornerstones to provide health services
to vulnerable communities. In
Nigeria , the IFRC
supported the National Society to mobilize and
train nearly 3,000 volunteers. The volunteers
increased awareness and house-to-house social
mobilization for the integrated measles, yellow
fever and COVID-19 vaccination campaigns in
three states. With funding from the