Red Crescent adopted the resolution
Time to
act: Tackling epidemics and pandemics together
.
The IFRC works with National Societies on
initiatives related to community and institu-
tional epidemic preparedness, immunization
for COVID-19 and other vaccine-preventable
diseases, the provision of water,
sanitation and
hygiene facilities, community-based surveillance,
and community engagement and accountability.
It also supports preparedness and response
to outbreaks, through DREF and emergency
appeals and the deployment of Emergency
Response Units. It influences global health secu-
rity policy debates to advocate for system-wide
strategic investments in the preparedness of
communities and first responders,
supports
National Societies to advise governments to
establish robust disaster-related legal frame-
works for the management of public health
emergencies, and provides tools and guidance
with the membership to guide community and
institutional preparedness for disease outbreaks.
The IFRC supports the implementation of pro-
grammes to strengthen
community epidemic
and pandemic preparedness, with 27 countries
engaged as of end 2022.
Tools and approaches developed through pro-
grammes and response operations are shared
with the membership, with a training package
on Epidemic Preparedness and Response in
Communities and an online Epidemic Control
Toolkit for volunteers and managers:
https://
epidemics.ifrc.org
released in 2022. Close
coordination with other health units, as well as
policy,
disaster law, community engagement
and accountability and National Society prepar-
edness teams have ensured synergies and the
harmonization of tools, approaches and guid-
ance for the IFRC network.
Community health
Community health is a priority area for the IFRC,
which works to expand access to quality health
services and ensure
communities are engaged
and empowered to address those health issues
which affect them. IFRC community health
programmes are designed to ensure hard to
reach and socially distanced populations are
not left behind. The main areas of focus include
first aid, mental health and psychosocial support,
immunization, addressing the health needs to
people on the move, climate’s effects on health,
and non-communicable diseases such as diabe-
tes and heart disease.
National Societies are supported to deliver
health services through IFRC’s Regional, Cluster
and Country Offices. The unit works with various
normative bodies such as WHO, US CDC and
academia to develop and disseminate opera-
tional guidance for
membership in the form of;
toolkits, training (both in person and virtually),
webinars and implementation guidelines.
The team also works to capture lessons learned
and examples of better practice and dissemi-
nate those across the IFRC network. The unit
also works to support peer to peer learning by
sponsoring exchange visits between National
Societies.
In 2022, IFRC’s malaria programme supported
22 countries to distribute 190
million bed
nets to prevent malaria saving an estimated
190,000 lives.
Mental health and psychosocial support services
The IFRC supports National Societies to develop
their capacity for delivering mental health and
psychosocial support services (MHPSS), to
ensure that individuals have access to these
when and where most needed.
The key objective is to support National Societies
to increase the number of people with access to
mental health services and operationalize the IFRC
mental health framework through task-shifting
and further development of scalable mental
health and psychosocial support interventions.
The 192 member National Societies,
with support
from the IFRC and IFRC Psychosocial Centre,
provide a variety of services and programmes
to address the mental health and psychosocial
support needs of communities around the
world. Addressing mental health and psychosocial
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