Emergency teams train to prevent, respond to sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment

Niamey – As one of the first-ever female urologist surgeons in sub-Saharan Africa, Dr Médina NDoye regularly faces students’ astonishment at her choice to embrace a “male speciality”.

“Unfortunately, this is a well-anchored stereotype in people’s mindset and surprisingly quite widespread in the medical community, too,” says Dr Ndoye. “As a female urologist, diving into this male-dominated world every day makes me feel like I am providing a concrete response to challenge this gender bias.”

To help challenge other gender-based issues, the Senegalese urology surgeon recently co-facilitated training on gender-based violence that the World Health Organization (WHO) organized in Niamey, Niger.

In line with the WHO’s “zero tolerance policy” for sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment, its mandate on violence against women and girls within its Global Plan of Action and its minimum commitment to provide services to gender-based violence survivors through the Health Cluster, the integrated training on gender-based violence and prevention and response to sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment is part of WHO’s surge project to improve the capacity of all Member States in the African region to better prepare, detect and respond to public health emergencies.

For 10 days, 150 members of surge teams from Niger, Mauritania and Togo – epidemiologists, health specialists, veterinarians, firefighters, police officers, and other civil servants from various ministries – were trained on gender-based violence and how to prevent and report on sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment by the regional coordinators for gender-based violence and prevention and response to sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment.

Sexual exploitation refers to any actual or attempted abuse of position of vulnerability, differential power or trust for sexual purposes. Sexual abuse means the actual or threatened physical intrusion of a sexual nature, whether by force or under unequal or coercive conditions.

Francesca Paola Crabu, the WHO Africa Regional Coordinator for the Prevention and Response to Sexual Exploitation, Abuse and Harassment, notes that working closely with communities is a key component of emergency teams’ interventions, which rely on trust between health experts and communities. If this relationship of trust is broken through sexual abuse and exploitation, it causes further harm to already-vulnerable populations and creates barriers. Ultimately, it hinders emergency teams’ ability to aid.

During recent disease outbreaks in the region, WHO began to implement mechanisms for the prevention of and response to sexual exploitation and abuse, including massive sensitization within communities and continuous learning events through the designation of community focal points. These focal points are essential as a safe and culturally accepted “bridge” between communities and WHO and the humanitarian system. Women-led organizations, religious leaders and various officials at schools and universities have been trained to help WHO raise awareness among communities about the six Inter-Agency Standing Committee’s principles on the prevention and response to sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment.

Additionally, every WHO staff who is to be deployed for either an emergency or general work mission now must participate in a training session on preventing and responding to sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment.

“Even though I have worked in a high-level position at the Ministry of Health for 10 years, this is the first time that I have heard about gender-based violence and prevention and response to sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment,” says Dr Aboubacar Gandou Issiakou, the Centre for Public Health Emergency Operations Coordinator at Niger’s Ministry of Health and a recent training participant. “After this training, I will advocate in my Ministry to establish standard operating procedures, train all staff and include a gender-based violence and PRSEAH module in the curriculum at university level.”

Women leaders in emergency responses make a difference

There is a long way to go to for WHO’s emergency teams to be gender equal. Having women occupy leadership positions in emergency responses is crucial for fighting stereotypes and preventing sexual misconduct, says Crabu.

In Niger, medical doctor and Lieutenant-Colonel Habibatou Ide Amadou has been designated to lead the national emergency team. With more than 25 years of experience, including with United Nations peacekeeping operations, coupled with her background as a paediatrician and epidemiologist, she is committed to ensuring that prevention and response to gender-based violence and PRSEAH is a top priority for each person working in an emergency. “When there are senior females in emergency settings, men have less degrading behaviour towards women and girls. Community members feel more comfortable to share their concerns,” she says. “This training comes at a timely moment. Since we started it, men are more and more at ease to talk with women and acknowledge their competencies.”

At the end of August, the surge training in Botswana will close the first batch of piloted countries. The next step will be to roll out surge training across the region and increase the number of gender-based violence and PRSEAH experts to be deployed as part of health emergency teams. The impact of the training will be visible throughout the operations, with gender-based violence and PRSEAH integrated into action plans.

In Niger, Mauritania and Togo training, the surge participants drafted a workplan for each country represented and constructively discussed them together. Going forward, all SURGE team members signed a Code of Conduct to prevent sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment. Efforts to introduce gender-based violence and PRSEAH at government levels are also ongoing.

Source: World Health Organization. Africa

National experts converge to review public health surveillance data in Sierra Leone

Public health experts in Sierra Leone are meeting to review data of the past three months on trend of priority diseases in the country. Drawn from the technical and administrative levels from the national and districts in the country, as well as partners, the experts will monitor and evaluate the surveillance indicators and performance of three key components including disease surveillance, laboratory capacity and the immunization programmes for the period April to June of 2022.

This is the second meeting of the experts this year. Held quarterly, the meeting facilitates information sharing among the national and district health authorities and partners, ensures data harmonization and seeks viable solutions to jointly enhance effective performance of public health surveillance activities and improve progress in vaccine preventable diseases in Sierra Leone.

Some of the additional key outcomes of this meeting will include review of the indicator for COVID-19 disease surveillance and plan for a possible upsurge of the disease. It will also facilitate refresher training for surveillance and laboratory officers to strength surveillance of vaccine preventable diseases.

“Remarkable progress has been made in disease surveillance in Sierra Leone as evident in the quality of the weekly data that is reported from all public health facilities across the country”, says Dr Steven V Shongwe, WHO Representative in Sierra Leone. “And for us at WHO, we consider bringing together the people who generate these data and the national authorities and health development partners that would eventually use the data for decision making, as a matter of utmost priority for achieving health security and universal health coverage”, he added.

Sierra Leone has made significant progress in achieving targets of the WHO regional and global public health surveillance indicators despite the challenges and disruptions of planned activities caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Ministry of Health and Sanitation, through the Directorate of Health Security and Emergency and the National Disease Surveillance Programme, with the support of WHO and other partners, tracks the occurrence of priority diseases, including vaccine preventable diseases in the country, conducts active case search, case investigation, specimen collection and laboratory investigation.

The Ministry also conducts regular programme performance monitoring to get clear information on the performance of the districts to guide decision making at the various levels.

WHO country office is providing technical and financial support to enhance the country’s diseases surveillance capacities by facilitating supportive supervision, district meetings and national review meetings like this one.

Effective public health surveillance is one of the important strategies for disease prevention and control in a country.

Source: World Health Organization. Africa

WHO and the Ministry of Health Train 29 Regional Emergency Responders in the Prevention and Management of viral hemorrhagic fevers

The World Health Organization (WHO), in collaboration with the Uganda’s Ministry of Health, has commenced a five-day training for 29 emergency responders from five African countries. The training scheduled for 15th to 19th August 2022 at the Commonwealth Resort Hotel Munyonyo is intended to build regional capacity to respond to the unpredictable nature of outbreaks of Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers in the region.

Funded by WHO, participants are from Uganda, Zambia, South Sudan, Rwanda, and Tanzania and they will be trained through the newly updated manual on the management of Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers, which includes the use of approved drugs.

“It is essential that health workers are well informed on the revised management of viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHF) for future epidemics, to save lives and appropriately reduce transmission through adequate and appropriate infection control,” said Dr Paska Apiyo, Consultant Physician at the Gulu Regional Referral Hospital.

In his opening remarks, The Incident Manager for the WHO Country Office in Uganda, Dr Charles Njuguna said that “effective preparedness for unpredictable outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fevers is crucial for a rapid response to these diseases, which have caused catastrophic loss of life and other resources in the region.”

One of the recent viral hemorrhagic fevers in the region was the Ebola outbreak declared in the Democratic Republic of Congo on April 23, 2022, which ended three months later with four confirmed cases and one probable case, all of whom died.

Operational preparedness for imminent risk is part of the broader context of emergency preparedness and the need for countries to build longer-term capacity to manage public health events, including viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs). The Member States, with support from WHO and its partners, are seeking to invest more in long-term emergency preparedness capacity so that they are better prepared to manage future epidemics and other public health emergencies. Along with case management preparedness, there is a need to protect frontline health workers in the most at-risk districts in the country through vaccination against Ebola Virus Disease (EVD), an initiative that WHO is also pursuing.

“Proactive operational preparedness pays off by reducing the public health impact of emergencies, reducing the cost of response and recovery, and serves as a long-term investment in the health system’s capacity to manage health emergencies as per the International Health Regulations 2005.” Dr. Charles stressed.

In addition, the establishment of temporary and/or permanent treatment centers is essential to meet the highly required safety criteria for health care workers and the community.

The Republic of Uganda, which has long been one of the epicenters of the Ebola epidemic, is well positioned, given its existing structures for Ebola and other viral hemorrhagic fevers, to provide training for health care professionals.

This training is part of WHO’s existing support to countries to prevent and combat endemic diseases and health emergencies such as yellow fever, malaria, monkeypox, and disasters including floods, famine, and drought.

Source: World Health Organization. Africa

Late former Pres Dos Santos’ body to be released to widow, returned to Angola

A Barcelona court has ordered the body of former Angolan leader Jose Eduardo dos Santos be released to his widow and returned home for burial, according to a ruling published Wednesday.

In a decision dated Tuesday, the court decided that Dos Santos’ remains “be delivered to his widow Ana Paula Cristovao dos Santos for burial” and granted authorisation for “the repatriation and international transfer of (his) remains to Angola”.

Dos Santos, who ruled the oil-rich African nation with an iron first from 1979 to 2017, died in Barcelona on July 8 at the age of 79 after suffering a cardiac arrest.

Since then, the question of when and where he will be buried has pitted the Angolan government and his widow, Ana Paula, against some of his adult children.

Last month, several of his children signed a letter in which they agreed to hold a state funeral for their father in Angola but only after an election later this month.

But his 44-year-old daughter Tchize dos Santos, who filed a legal complaint in Barcelona alleging “attempted murder” against her father’s widow and his personal doctor, has insisted he wanted to be buried in Spain where he had lived since 2019.

Just days after his death, an autopsy was carried out at her request on grounds he died in “suspicious circumstances” and in mid-July a court refused to release his body until the tests were finished and it had been decided to which relative his body would be released.

In its ruling, the court said its decision was based on the definitive autopsy results which it received on Aug 16, saying the analyses carried were “conclusive” and show he died “a death from natural causes”.

She firmly opposes his body’s return to Angola and on Wednesday issued a statement through her lawyers vowing to appeal the ruling on grounds that the court did not have the jurisdiction to rule on what was essentially a civil matter.

“There is a civil proceeding about this matter already under way,” said her legal team in a statement.

When he stepped down in 2017, dos Santos handed over to former defence minister Joao Lourenco whom he had handpicked to succeed him.

But Lourenco quickly turned on his erstwhile patron, unleashing an anti-corruption drive to recoup billions he suspected had been embezzled under dos Santos, a campaign that has targeted the former president’s family.

Source: Nam News Network (NNN)

SADC Summit: Maritime security continues to be a threat, says Seychelles’ President

Maritime security continues to be a threat to the safety of Seychelles and is becoming one of the most significant issues for the whole African continent, President Wavel Ramkalawan said on Wednesday.

Ramkalwan was making an intervention on key decisions taken at the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Summit for heads of state and government held in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

According to State House, Ramkalawan delivered two main interventions on key decisions aligned with the Seychelles agenda as an African Small Island Developing State (SID).

On Decision 2 – Political and Security in the Region, Ramkalawan said that while the threat of piracy off the coast of Somalia has abated “we are seriously concerned by the emerging maritime threats in our region.”

He said that the western part of the Indian Ocean is a highway for the transshipment of illegal narcotics, human and weapons trafficking.

“Our maritime resources are being poached through illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, and our oceans are being polluted by the illegal dumping, contributing to the acidification of our oceans and putting our livelihoods at grave risk. Let us also be reminded that all indications are that funding for the insurgency in our region is obtained from illegal and illicit activities, such as drug and weapons trafficking occurring on the high seas,” added Ramkalawan.

The President of Seychelles, an archipelago in the western Indian Ocean, outlined a set of recommendations that were adopted as one of the key final decisions of the summit in steering the course for the SADC Maritime Security Strategy.

His second intervention was on Decision 24 of the agenda on the amendment of the SADC Treaty to transform the SADC Parliamentary Forum into a SADC Parliament.

“Transformation of the Forum to a SADC Parliament will undeniably bring us closer to the achievement of the SADC milestones and assist us in implementing the long-term social and economic policies under the Regional Indicative Strategic Development Plan,” said Ramkalawan.

He added that this step forward is in line with the developments taking place in major and mature regional economic communities around the world which are all buttressed by the work of their respective regional parliaments.

After deliberations, the heads of states adopted the annotated agenda and final communique for the 42nd SADC summit as well as signed the various new legal resolutions and amendments to the SADC treaty.

Ramkalawan signed in favour of amending the treaty permitting the transformation of the SADC Parliamentary Forum into a SADC Parliament.

The summit also approved for the 43rd SADC Summit to be held in Luanda, Angola in 2023.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

Ghana reports first cases of deadly Marburg virus

Two cases of the deadly Marburg virus have been identified in Ghana, the first time the Ebola-like disease has been found in the West African nation, health authorities announced Sunday.

Earlier in the month, blood samples taken from two people in the southern Ashanti region suggested the Marburg virus.

The samples were sent to the Pasteur Institute in Senegal which confirmed the diagnosis, the Ghana Health Service (GHS) said.

“This is the first time Ghana has confirmed Marburg Virus Disease,” said GHS head Patrick Kuma-Aboagye said in a statement.

No treatment or vaccine exists for Marburg, which is almost as deadly as Ebola. Its symptoms include high fever as well as internal and external bleeding.

A total of 98 people identified as contact cases are currently under quarantine, the GHS statement said, noting that no other cases of Marburg had yet been detected in Ghana.

The WHO said Guinea had confirmed a single case in an outbreak declared over in September 2021.

Previous outbreaks and sporadic cases of Marburg in Africa have been reported in Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, South Africa and Uganda, according to the World Health Organization.

The Marburg virus can spread from infected animals, including bats.

“The public is therefore advised to avoid caves inhabited by bat colonies and to cook all meat products ‘thoroughly’ before consumption,” the Ghanaian health authorities advised.

In addition, anyone identified as having been in contact with sufferers, including medical staff, must self-isolate.

The viral illness hits sufferers suddenly, with high fever and severe headaches.

Fatality rates in confirmed cases have ranged from 24 percent to 88 percent in previous outbreaks, depending on the virus strain and case management, according to the WHO.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

US to Boost Monkeypox Vaccine Supply

The White House announced Thursday it will make an additional 1.8 million doses of monkeypox vaccine available for distribution beginning next week.

At a news conference, White House national monkeypox response coordinator Bob Fenton said the additional doses will be available for U.S. jurisdictions to order starting Monday, through the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky and HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra also took part in the news briefing.

Fenton said in the less than 10 days since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the CDC authorized the Jynneos vaccine for emergency use against monkeypox in individuals 18 years of age and older, HHS has delivered nearly 1 million doses to U.S. states and cities, making it the largest program of its kind for monkeypox vaccine in the world.

Fenton said the additional doses are part of the National Monkeypox Response Team’s plan to address the viral disease’s outbreak in the United States and mitigate its spread.

He said HHS has been working on launching a pilot program that will provide up to 50,000 doses from the national stockpile to be made available for events that will have high attendance of gay and bisexual men.

While monkeypox is not classified as a sexually transmitted infection, or STI, it has been found to be disproportionally affecting men who have sex with men. The disease can spread through close or intimate physical contact such as hugging, kissing and sex. It can also be transmitted by touching infected items such as clothing, bedding or towels.

Fenton said the Biden administration has also significantly increased availability and convenience of monkeypox tests, expanding capacity from 6,000 tests per week to 80,000 tests per week.

Source: Voice of America

WHO Experts Recommend COVID Booster Shots for High-Risk People

A group of World Health Organization experts is recommending COVID-19 booster shots for people at the highest risk of severe illness and death. The Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization or SAGE, which met in extraordinary session August 11, issued its updated guidance Thursday.

SAGE recommends continued use of the two-dose mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. Since the vaccines’ efficacy wanes after several months, however, the group of experts advises a booster shot for everyone, beginning with those at highest risk.

This is the first time SAGE has updated its guidance on the administration of a second booster shot. Its recommendations are based on increasing evidence on the benefits of a second booster dose of COVID-19 vaccines for select groups of people.

SAGE chairman Alejandro Cravioto said the group recommends a second booster shot for people older than 55 who are considered at highest risk of developing severe disease and in need of hospitalization. He said SAGE does not advocate a second booster for the general public, for adults who are generally healthy and do not suffer from severe immunodeficiency.

“We also include persons with moderate and severe immuno-compromising conditions from, say, 6 months and above,” Cravioto said. “And that includes the children and adults with co-morbidities at higher risk of severe disease. We also include pregnant women and health workers.”

SAGE recommends a second booster be given four to six months after the administration of the first. It says healthy children and adolescents remain at low risk of severe disease from COVID-19, so there currently is no recommendation for youth groups to be vaccinated.

Cravioto, however, said SAGE has made interim recommendations for the use of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines in relation to their use in children.

“In the case of both vaccines, children from 6 months to 17 years with co-morbidities should be vaccinated to avoid a higher risk in these groups of severe disease. … This includes, of course, children with Down syndrome, who we know are at the highest risk of dying of COVID if they get infected.”

The group of experts notes the recommendations are based on the current available data. They say it is not a projection into the future but relates specifically to the omicron variant of the coronavirus. It says the guidance is likely to change depending on how the pandemic evolves and new variants circulate.

Source: Voice of America