2022 in focus: climate and health
Already the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, Yemen was not spared by floods
Extensive flooding ravaged several governorates in Yemen, with tens of thousands of people affected across 85 districts in 16 governorates damaging the shelters, livelihoods and water sources of approximately 35 000 households, mostly in displacement sites and settlements.
In urgent response, WHO provided emergency health and laboratory supplies, and joined field missions with national health authorities and other humanitarian partners. WHO supported 4 specialized trauma teams and 6 on-duty ambulances on the ground, as well as set up 34 early warning detection points in Ma’rib – one of the most affected governorates – where thousands of shelters for displaced families were destroyed. Additional essential emergency health supplies were also released to rapid response and emergency medical teams, 5 therapeutic feeding centres were supported, and emergency response kits, additional cholera kits, IV fluids and rapid diagnostic tests for cholera were distributed.
Message from Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, WHO Regional Director, on inauguration of WHO country office in Bahrain
Your Excellency Dr Faeqa Bint Saeed Alsaleh, Minister of Health,
Your Excellency Dr Abdullatif bin Rashid Alzayani, Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Acting United Nations Resident Coordinator Representative Dr Hashim Hussein,
WHO Director-General Dr Tedros,
WHO Representative to Bahrain Dr Tasnim Atatrah,
Distinguished attendees, colleagues and friends,
Thank you for joining us as we take this momentous step to further strengthen the long-standing relationship between the Kingdom of Bahrain and the World Health Organization.
I would like to extend special thanks to Her Excellency Dr Faeqa Bint Saeed Alsaleh for supporting and facilitating the opening of WHO’s new country office.
Today, we commend Bahrain for your timely efforts to implement WHO recommendations related to managing this global pandemic.
Responding to COVID-19 has taught us 3 key lessons.
First, a successful response can only be achieved through a whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach. Here, let me acknowledge the steps taken by Bahrain to restructure the response to the pandemic to ensure a multisectoral approach, supported at the highest levels of government.
Second, success can only be achieved by fully engaging communities so that they are aware of the risks facing them and can themselves play a key role in preventing the spread of misinformation. Again, Bahrain has taken great strides in this area.
Third, success requires regional and global solidarity and collaboration. It is only by sharing lessons learned, experiences and resources that we can all come out of this pandemic stronger and better prepared for the next one. And Bahrain has a wealth of lessons to share.
We have all seen how the response to the pandemic has overstretched health systems, overwhelmed health workers and threatened the continuity of essential health services.
Bahrain has done excellent work to maintain the continuity of health care and ensure access to vital services in areas such as maternal and child health, mental health and other noncommunicable diseases.
WHO is committed to working with Bahrain to strengthen the provision of all essential health services, and a senior regional expert will be coming next month to work with our country office and national counterparts to focus on this critical area of work.
WHO also commends Bahrain’s leadership in expanding public health interventions. Let me highlight just a few of the key milestones that you have achieved.
Your nursing programme is a model for the Region. You have led the way in integrating noncommunicable diseases into the primary health care system. And the recent designation of Manama as a Healthy City promises further progress in promoting population health.
These and other achievements have placed Bahrain on the regional and global map as an innovator and leader in public health.
The opening of this new WHO country office is a chance to build on those achievements. It will ensure deeper strategic collaboration between WHO, our esteemed national counterparts, our sister United Nations agencies and other partners. And it will also create opportunities for new partnerships and resource mobilization, especially in the Gulf sub-region.
Partnership for health is at the heart of WHO’s vision of Health for All by All in the Eastern Mediterranean Region. The Kingdom of Bahrain has been a key partner in the global and regional health arenas, and I am delighted that our partnership is now set to go even further.
In September, WHO will sign a landmark memorandum of understanding with Dr Khalid Alohaly, President of the Arabian Gulf University of Bahrain, to support the implementation of the WHO regional diploma programme in family medicine as an essential part of efforts to strengthen health systems and advance universal health coverage in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries.
This important project emphasizes WHO’s commitment to strengthen cooperation with health sector stakeholders in Bahrain and other GCC countries.
I am confident that with our new country office plus the leadership of our WHO Representative, Dr Tasnim Atatrah, and the full support of all 3 levels of WHO, we will have an even greater positive impact on the health and well-being of people in Bahrain than ever before.
WHO will work on the ground with authorities, United Nations partners and other stakeholders in health, development and other sectors to foster public health collaboration at the national, regional and international levels.
I also look forward to seeing the many best practices and innovations that Bahrain has pioneered being adopted across the Region and beyond.
Let us use your experiences to help advance efforts in other countries. It is only by working together, learning from each other and supporting each other that we can eventually achieve our regional vision of a healthier future for all people, by all people.
Thank you.
Message from Dr Tasnim Atatrah, WHO Representative, on inauguration of WHO country office in Bahrain
Your Excellency Dr Faeqa Bint Saeed Alsaleh, Minister of Health
Your Excellency Dr Abdullatif bin Rashid Alzayani, Minister of Foreign Affairs
Acting United Nations Resident Coordinator Representative Dr Hashim Hussein
WHO Director-General Dr Tedros
My dear colleagues, brothers, and sisters,
I joined WHO in 2010 because I believed in the mission and vision of the Organization and wanted to play a role to make the world a better, healthier place. I am a humanitarian, and I believe that all people are equal and should have access to all basic human rights, including access to health care.
During my career with WHO, I supported the organization in its efforts to respond to several public health emergencies, and strengthen health systems to advance the realization of universal health coverage. Throughout this time, I saw the difference that WHO made – by working with governments and partners – to the lives to the people who need it most. This is why we do what we do — to save lives, protect health, and preserve the well-being of all people, everywhere.
Today, I am honoured to represent the Organization as WHO Representative in the Kingdom of Bahrain. I thank you all for the trust and confidence that you have placed on me.
Working closely with Her Excellency Dr Faeqa Bint Saeed Alsaleh, Minister of Health, and under the leadership of Dr Tedros and Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, I pledge to do my utmost to serve both WHO and the Kingdom of Bahrain to fulfill our collective missions of ensuring the health and well-being of all people in the country, and also to promote Bahrain as a model for other countries, both within the Region and beyond.
Our focus will be to support the excellent ongoing response to the pandemic while also supporting Bahrain to achieve its health goals.
For COVID-19, we will work to ensure that our global and regional recommendations are tailored to the Bahrain context, as well as provide first hand technical expertise and guidance. We will also work to document lessons learnt and best practices, focusing on innovation used in the response, and vaccinations.
Overall, WHO’s strategy for its country office in Bahrain aims to advance the health and well-being of all people based on the Organization’s global and regional strategy. This involves working closely with all national counterparts and partners, and utilizing all assets, in line with the mission outlined in GPW 13, focusing on the priorities set for the Kingdom of Bahrain.
To achieve this, WHO will focus on 3 key areas:
- Establish a flagship destination for effective and efficient advice and best practices to advance health and well-being in the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Middle East, and globally.
- Identify specific areas of advancing health where the Kingdom of Bahrain as an incubator for success can export and share with other countries.
- Collaborate with other United Nations agencies, ministries, and government institutions to advance the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals and that health is integrated in all policies.
I am sure that with the support of the Regional office and headquarters, the excellent national expertise, and our dedicated UN partners on the ground, we will succeed.
Thank you.