20203006 covid19 quarterly report...the boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this...
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The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Sources: OCHA, WFP, WHO Ministry Of Health, CPRP Feedback:
www.unocha.org/somalia www.reliefweb.int/country/somalia www.humanitarianresponse.info/countries/somalia
SOMALIACOVID-19 Quarterly Report March - June 2020
OverviewSince 16 March when the coronavirus was first reported in Somalia, confirmed cases have surged to 2,894, with 90 associated deaths and 887 recoveries. The cases, which include 133 health workers across the country, have mostly resulted from community transmission, and men constitute nearly two-thirds. The coronavirus has exacerbated pre-exist-ing vulnerabilities, disrupted positive gains in socio-economic activities and affected livelihoods especially for low-income earners. Furthermore, the cases have surged at a time that Somalia is struggling to contain floods that have affected nearly a million people and desert locusts that are devouring crops and pasture in Somaliland, Puntland and Galmudug; creating a triple threat. Concern is growing that the virus may spread to IDP settlements, where 2.6 million live in congested shelters.
UN agencies and partners have scaled up their responses to the pandem-ic, despite COVID-19-related operational challenges such as most staff working from home, in restricted environments or remotely; restrictions on flights and closure of borders thereby disrupting supply chains. The agencies and partners have built the capacity of the health system including supporting the establishment and operation of testing laborato-ries in Mogadishu, Garowe and Hargeysa; provided equipment and operational support to hospitals, isolation centres and laboratories; and scaled up awareness-raising. At the same time, ongoing humanitarian operations are continuing. In May, 2.3 million people received food assistance, with amounts scaled up to mitigate food security implica-tions by distributing combined two-month rations
Situation Highlights
Cases and Deaths by Gender and Age
2894confirmed cases
90death cases
1,917active cases
887recovered cases
40suspected cases
6,677# of samples
tested
474close contacts under followup
510events investigated
16functional isolation
facilities
334isolation beds ready
277beds in two
quarantine sites
2000PPEs distributed to
all states
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
12.6% 87.8%
10.5%
12.4%
32.4%
20%
10%
1.1%
1.1%
5.1%
Confirmed CasesDeath
> 60 years
50-60 years
40-50 years
30-40 years
20-30 years
< 20 years
https://covid19som-ochasom.hub.arcgis.com/ Produced by the Information Management Unit
Confirmed Cases by Region Confirmed Deaths by Region Recovered Cases by Region
Bay
Mudug
Sool
Gedo
Sanaag
HiraanBakool
Awdal
Galgaduud
LowerJuba
Togdheer
Lower Shabelle
Woqooyi Galbeed
MiddleJuba
MiddleShabelle
Banadir
Bay
Mudug
Sool
Gedo
Sanaag
HiraanBakool
Awdal
Galgaduud
LowerJuba
Togdheer
Lower Shabelle
Woqooyi Galbeed
MiddleJuba
MiddleShabelle
Banadir
710 290
117
23
1,431
144
179
258
1
1
53
1
1
Bay
Mudug
Sool
Gedo
Sanaag
HiraanBakool
Awdal
Galgaduud
LowerJuba
Togdheer
Lower Shabelle
Woqooyi Galbeed
MiddleJuba
MiddleShabelle
Banadir
150 63
15
8
547
36
68
Operations Overview
airports open for passengers1 out of 12
airports open for cargo12 out of 12
ports open for cargo8 out of 8
border crossing open1 out of 21
passengers screened at designated points of entry4,306
72%Male Female
28%
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Sources: NGO and media partners, UN agencies, Federal Government of Somalia Feedback:
www.unocha.org/somalia www.reliefweb.int/country/somalia www.humanitarianresponse.info/countries/somalia
SOMALIACOVID-19 Quarterly Report March - June 2020
Risk Communication & Community EngagementThe Risk Communication and Community Engagement (RCCE) task force comprising Government entities, UN agencies, NGOs, media partners and AMISOM, has been instrumental in raising COVID-19 awareness, dispelling rumours and countering stigma. The task force has reached 10.9 million people including 1 million IDPs in 867 sites, using different educative platforms such as information, education and communication materials, SMS messages, TV and radio broadcasts, as well as community level interventions such as public addresses and household visits to scale-up public sensitisation. The RCCE activities involve frontline workers and community opinion leaders.
https://covid19som-ochasom.hub.arcgis.com/ Produced by the Information Management Unit
Activities by region
Key figures
4,399TV broadcasts
54,330Feedback received
5,838Radio broadcasts
7,415Rumors Tracked
5,538Hours in Public
Addressing
458,492Households Visited
18,654Frontline workers Involved
153,751IEC Materials Produced
167,529SMS broadcasts
Bari
Bay
Mudug
Sool
Gedo
Sanaag
Hiraan
Nugaal
Bakool
Awdal
Galgaduud
LowerJuba
Togdheer
Lower Shabelle
Woqooyi Galbeed
MiddleJuba
Middle Shabelle
Banadir
5
33
People reached by partners’ community level intervention
38partners
# of RCCE Activities by partner in various channels
0 10 20 30 40 50
TV Broadcasts
SMS Broadcasts
Radio Broadcasts
Hours in public Address
Rumors Tracking
Opinion leaders oriented
Frontline workers involved
IEC Materials Supply
Community level interventions
Households Visits
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500Others
ACFACTEDHARD
AAHWVI
MedairCEDA
IOMUNICEF
CCCMCARE
TOTAL REACH
4.29M
# of Frontline Workers Involved # of Households Visited
# of Opinion Leaders Oriented# of Information, Education and Communication (IEC)Materials Printed
- 2,000
6,000
10,000
14,000
11 12 13 14 16 17 19 21 24 26 31 4 6 7 8 15 21May June
-
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
11 12 13 14 16 17 19 21 24 26 31 4 6 7 8 15 21May
-
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
11 12 13 14 16 17 19 21 24 26 31 4 6 7 8 15 21May June
- 20,000
60,000
100,000
140,000
180,000
11 12 13 14 16 17 19 21 24 26 31 4 6 7 8 15 21
May June
June
Cumulative# of households visited
Cumulative# opinion leadersoriented
Cumulative# of frontlineworkersinvolved
Cumulative# of IECmaterialsprinted
18,654 458,492
18,897153,751
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Sources: OCHA, WFP, Ministry Of Health, CPRP, FTS Feedback:
www.unocha.org/somalia www.reliefweb.int/country/somalia www.humanitarianresponse.info/countries/somalia
SOMALIACOVID-19 Quarterly Report March - June 2020
Funding and ResponseDonors have provided $39.4 million for the Somalia component of the COVID-19 Global Humanitarian Response Plan, meeting 17.5 per cent of funding requirements. Almost half ($19.4 million) has been provided for distribution across multiple clusters, including health, protection, nutrition and WASH. The remaining funds have been allocated primarily for health, food security and protection, with smaller contributions for CCCM, enabling programmes and WASH. Protection is the best covered cluster, with a quarter of its funding needs met. Five clusters have not yet received any funding, including education which has the third largest budgetary needs following food security and health. In total, $186.2 million is still required to meet the immediate health and humanitarian needs of people in Somalia affected by COVID-19.
https://covid19som-ochasom.hub.arcgis.com/ Produced by the Information Management Unit
Beneficiaries Reached by CPRP Objectives
0 50 100Water, Sanitation and Hygiene ($0.2)
Shelter and NFIs ($0)
Refugee Response ($0)
Protection ($4.1m)
Nutrition ($0)
Multi-purpose Cash ($0)
Health ($5.7m)
Food Security ($3.5m)
Enabling Programmes ($0.9m)
Education ($0)
CCCM ($1.5m)
Funding Progress by Cluster/Sector
1- Direct support to the Health Preparedness and Response component of the Federal Government of Somalia’s Comprehensive Socio-Economic Impact and Response Plan for COVID-19
IDPs Non IDPs Refugees Other
1. Country-level coordination,
planning & monitoring
2. Risk communica-tion & community
engagement
3. Surveillance, rapid response teams &
case investigationg
4. Points of Entry 5. National Laboratories
6. Infection prevention and
control
7. Case management
8. Operational support and
logistics
9. Essential health services
10. Psychosocial care
3K 2.5K 240 50 600K 128K 27K 10.1M 1.2K 8.6K 166 5K - - - 92.5K - - - -
62K 2.1K 24K 275K - - - 33.2K 1.2K 8.6K 166 5K 5.4K 43K - 246K 5.4K 108K 100 32
2- Support to the indirect but immediate humanitarian consequences of the pandemic, particularly continuity of critical interventions identified within the 2020
1. CCCM 2. Education 3. Food Security 4. Health 5. Enabling Programmes
6. Nutrition 7. Protection 8. Shelter 9. WASH 10. RRP and MRP
223K 40K 45 972 7K 40K 200 167K 1.7M 3.7M 53K 114K 69K 393K 88K 147K - - - -
265K 281K 4K 479K 1.6M 792K 101K 19K 951K 8K 12 32 180K 73K 3K 344K - - - -
19.1% 80.9%
Funded Gap
100%
90.4%
100%
100%
100%
100%
99%
94.5%5.4%
12% 88%
25% 75%
Multiple Clusters (Shared) ($19.4)
Total Required Total required: $225 million
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Sources: WFP/Logistics Feedback:
www.unocha.org/somalia www.reliefweb.int/country/somalia www.humanitarianresponse.info/countries/somalia
SOMALIACOVID-19 Quarterly Report March - June 2020
https://covid19som-ochasom.hub.arcgis.com/ Produced by the Information Management Unit
Overview
Somalia’s sea ports are operational (Mogadishu, Kismayo, Berbera, and Bossaso). The key airports are open for cargo but closed to passenger flights except Hargeysa which is open for Ethiopian Airlines passengers to Addis Ababa. The Berbera corridor is open for WFP and commercial entities. Having received authorisation from Somali and Ethiopian Governments, WFP Aviation is chartering flights within East Africa.
The Logistics Cluster, jointly with UNHAS, is supporting the transportation of medical teams and COVID-19 supplies including PPE kits, for the Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH); transporting 11 MT and 162 officials to Doolow, Belet Weyne, Afmadow, Bardera, Kismayo, Gaalkacyo, Guriel, Burte Bulo, Dhuushamarreeb, Hudur and Garbaharey, from 28 May to 9 June. The Cluster facilitates dedicated cargo airlifts on behalf of the FMoH, Office of the Prime Minister (OPM), WHO and key health partners; dispatching over 24 MT to Dhuusamarreeb, Kismayo, Baidoa, Jowhar, Hargeysa, Belet Weyne, Garowe, Guriel and Barawe as of 25 June. Also, WFP through the Logistics Cluster has been supporting Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) in developing a stock inventory tool.
The Cluster facilitated the air transportation of 300 refugee housing units on behalf of UNHCR, to Baidoa and Doolow, for flood response. The Cluster also facilitates the air transportation of essential flood response cargo such as sandbags and non-food items like hospital beds and tents; transporting 115 MT on behalf of five organisations (OPM/FMoH, Gredo, UNHCR, IOM, MOHADM) to Baidoa, Belet Weyne, El Berde, Doolow, Hobyo and Jowhar, as of 25 June.Key Activities
Bari
Bay
Mudug
Sool
Gedo
Sanaag
Hiraan
Nugaal
Bakool
Awdal
Galgaduud
LowerJuba
Togdheer
Lower Shabelle
Woqooyi Galbeed
MiddleJuba
Middle Shabelle
Banadir
Closed Crossing
Open Crossing
Seaport Entry
Airports open for Cargo
Airports, Ports and Border Crossing Status
Total number of passenger flightsflown into Somalia since May 2020
10
Total number of passengers transported by WFP Aviation from Addis – Mogadishu - Addis
75
Total number of passengers transported via UNHAS flights within Somalia
300
Total amount of cargo transported including medical supplies
45 metric tons
Total number of partners supported (coordination and facilitation of logistics services)
37UNHAS has been facilitating the timely movement of blood samples to key laboratories in Mogadishu and Nairobion behalf of the Ministry of Health