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World Health Organization Calls For Enhancing Security Of Hospitals

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  • World Health Organization Calls For Enhancing Security Of Hospitals

    WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION CALLS FOR ENHANCING SECURITY OF HOSPITALS IN EMERGENCY SITUATIONS

    ArmInfo
    2009-04-07 11:16:00

    ArmInfo. A conference entitled 'Save Lives: Enhance Security of
    Hospitals in Emergencies' was held at UN Office in Armenia on April
    7 on occasion of the World Health Day.

    Head of the World Health Organization Office in Armenia Elizabeth
    Danielyan said that in case of severe earthquakes and floods many
    states lose nearly 50% of medical facilities. Too often, health
    facilities are the first casualties of emergencies. This means
    that health workers are killed and wounded, that services are not
    available to treat survivors and that large investments of valuable
    health funding in health facility construction and equipment are
    squandered. Relatively inexpensive investments in infrastructure can
    save lives during disasters. Retrofitting non-structural elements in an
    otherwise structurally sound facility costs about 1% of the hospital's
    budget but will protect about 90% of its value. Infectious disease
    outbreaks are another form of public health emergency that staff
    should be trained for. In areas affected by conflicts, hospitals
    and clinics should be allowed to function by all parties in line
    with international humanitarian law. WHO is urging all ministries
    of health to review the safety of existing health facilities and to
    ensure that any new facilities are built with safety in mind.

    She said WHO is focussing attention on the large numbers of lives
    that can be saved during earthquakes, floods , conflicts and other
    emergencies if hospitals are better designed and constructed and health
    staff well trained to respond. She said construction of a new hospital
    resistant to natural calamities does not require much investment. 'It
    is even less expensive than modernization of the existing facilities',
    she said.

    E. Danielyan highlighted some effective measures to upgrade the
    readiness of hospitals to work during emergencies. Thus World Health
    Organization is recommending six core actions that governments,
    public health authorities and hosptal managers can undertake to
    make their health facilities safe during emergencies. These include
    training health workers, designing and building safe hospitals,
    retrofitting existing health facilities to make them more resilient
    and ensuring staff and supplies are secure during natural disasters,
    conflicts, outbreaks and other emergencies. Practical and effective
    low cost measures such as protecting equipment, developing emergency
    preparedness plans and training staff can help make health facilities
    safer, better prepared and more functional in emergencies The six core
    actions that governments, public health authorities and others who
    operate hospitals and health care facilities can take are: 1. Assess
    the security of your hospital 2. Protect and train health workers
    for emergencies 3. Plan for emergency response 4. Design and build
    resilient hospitals 5. Adopt national policies and programmes for
    safe hospitals Protect equipment, medicines and supplies

    For his part, representative of Armenian Ministry of Emergency
    Situations, Alvaro Antonyan, said that in Armenia seismic safety of
    buildings is the most important problem. He emphasized that in this
    context the capital city of the republic is the most vulnerable as
    against the background of dense population not all the buildings
    can resist 9 ball earthquake. He also said that in Armenia there
    are three types of medical service points and hospitals: 2-4-storied
    buildings built before 1960 (30% out of the total number); 2-4- storied
    buildings with concrete core (50%) and many-storied panel buildings
    (20%). Buildings with the concrete core are the most earthquake-proof,
    Antonyan said.
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