A staggering 1 out of every 2 public health facilities in Syria is either non-operational or partly operational[1]. 770 health workers have been killed over the course of the Syrian war and many others have fled the country[2]. In 2016 alone, there were reportedly 101 attacks on health care facilities in Syria[3], including on key hospitals in Meles, Sarmin, and Kafar Takharim in Idlib Province. Attacks have continued in 2017, with the main hospital serving Khan Sheikhoun, Idlib Province, having been attacked just days before the alleged chemical weapons attack in the area. In addition to the destruction of hospitals, aid actors are finding it increasingly difficult to bring supplies and staff into Syria and to conduct medical evacuations from the country[5]. At the same time, malnutrition rates have risen within the country[6]. Of the 12.8 million civilians in need of health assistance within Syria, “those at increased risk include… unvaccinated children [and] pregnant women without access to life-saving obstetric care or essential reproductive health care…”[7]
The needs for trained staff in Idleb, Hama and Aleppo is very high due to the leakage of the health workers to Turkey. Idleb alone has a population of 1,907,306 (including contains 809,355 IDPs) according to the NPM’s mobility and dynamic report_March2017. Most of the 250,000 IDPs live in camps that are located near the borders with turkey in Idleb and some in Aleppo (according to ACU-Dynamo_Febuary 2017) .
Taking into consideration:
[1] Annual Report 2016, Syrian Arabic Republic, WHO, 2016
[2] 2017 Humanitarian Needs Overview, Syrian Arabic Republic, UN OCHA, Dec 2016
[3] Ibid.
[4] Save the Children-supported maternity hospital bombed in Idlib, Save the Children, July 29,2016
[5] 2017 Humanitarian Needs Overview, Syrian Arabic Republic, UN OCHA, Dec 2016
[6] Annual Report 2016, Syrian Arabic Republic, WHO, 2016
[7] 2017 Humanitarian Needs Overview, Syrian Arabic Republic, UN OCHA, Dec 2016