Khaleej Times - Pakistan Resolution Day

A Gender-Sensitive Emergency Response to Flood-Affected Areas in Pakistan

IHHN’s transforma­tive Primary Care Programme, marked by innovative preventive and curative interventi­ons, has made a profound impact, benefiting over 9.2 million lives

- ■ Shiza Khan

According to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), climate change stands as the single most significan­t health threat facing humanity in the modern world. Intriguing­ly, climate change is not solely a geographic­al phenomenon; it profoundly impacts society, exacerbati­ng inequaliti­es for already marginalis­ed groups, particular­ly women and children. Hence, climate change is far from being ‘gender-neutral’. As per UN Women, as the climate crisis unravels, women and girls face various forms of Gender-Based Violence (GBV) and are less likely to overcome healthcare challenges, such as maternal issues, due to limited access to informatio­n, mobility, and decisionma­king abilities. These challenges are amplified in developing countries like Pakistan, which has been identified as one of the top 10 climate-vulnerable nations in the world.

In 2022, the devastatin­g flood in Pakistan shook the entire nation, posing the greatest humanitari­an crisis of the decade. The monsoon season brought with it disastrous floods that swept away not only homes and livestock, but also the livelihood­s of millions of people, submerging 30 percent of the country under water. The UN estimated that over 33 million people were affected, with more than 2,100 lives lost and around 12,000 injured. Pakistan also faced massive economic losses, which amounted to over $30 billion. According to WHO, approximat­ely 1,500 health facilities were damaged, significan­tly decimating the overall healthcare infrastruc­ture in the affected areas.

These harrowing statistics are insufficie­nt to capture the magnitude of devastatio­n and challenges faced by marginalis­ed segments of society, especially women and children. With the destructio­n of crops, inaccessib­le healthcare, water-borne and vector-borne diseases, 3.4 million children were at risk of malnutriti­on, 650,000 pregnant women and young girls in immediate need of assistance and vulnerable to escalating GBV. The crisis was further exacerbate­d by pre- existing structural gender inequities, aggravatin­g issues like forced marriages, unintended pregnancie­s, unsafe abortions, and sexually transmitte­d diseases.

Such a pressing predicamen­t necessitat­ed the need for innovative impactful solutions to aid in mitigating the healthcare crisis precipitat­ed by the floods. Indus Hospital & Health Network (IHHN), with its extensive network of free- of- cost tertiary and secondary care hospitals, along with its expansive primary care and public health initiative­s, was duly equipped to address the crisis. Characteri­sed by its multi-sectoral approach, diverse interventi­ons, and gender-sensitive initiative­s, IHHN’s transforma­tive Primary Care Programme, marked by innovative preventive and curative interventi­ons, has made a profound impact, benefiting over 9.2 million lives. This solid foundation equipped IHHN to be one the first organisati­ons to launch its multi-sectoral, multi-layered, and gender-sensitive climate-resistant flood-relief programme in Sindh and Punjab in collaborat­ion with UNFPA to facilitate sexual and reproducti­ve health facilities, curb GBV, and empower women.

IHHN’s extensive flood relief programme comprised 2 Mobile Medical Buses (MMBs), 3 specialise­d Basic Emergency Obstetric & Newborn Care (BEmONC) facilities and 327 medical camps. The program was pivotal in ensuring access to vital healthcare services to the most vulnerable. The MMBs, equipped to provide comprehens­ive reproducti­ve health services and safe delivery assistance, including antenatal care, postnatal care, family planning counsellin­g, and skilled deliveries, addressed urgent needs of 120,332 women requiring critical care. Meanwhile, the BEmONC facilities emerged as vital sanctuarie­s, delivering emergency obstetric care and conducting over 1,434 skilled deliveries, significan­tly reducing maternal and neonatal mortality rates. Moreover, the medical camps, through specialise­d consultati­ons, catered to the essential healthcare requiremen­ts of 27,172 patients, with a significan­t focus on women’s health needs. Thereby playing a pivotal role in alleviatin­g the suffering of women from these disaster-stricken communitie­s.

Optimising Telehealth, IHHN bridged healthcare gaps, offering remote consultati­ons in fixed sites along with five HumWell health clinics. These telehealth services facilitate­d access to healthcare profession­als for consultati­ons on SRH issues and provided reproducti­ve health services to women and girls in remote areas. Over 5,320 patients benefited from fixed Sites and HumWell mobile units, including Gynae patients, general OPD patients, and telehealth deliveries.

In light of surging GBV, IHHN created 18 Women & Girls Friendly Spaces (WGFS), provided psychosoci­al support, distribute­d dignity kits, and created awareness about GBV and SRH. Staffed with trained personnel, WGFS were used as central hubs for the provision of Psychosoci­al Support (PSS), GBV, and SRH awareness, GBV referrals and case management, and various recreation­al and vocational activities such as performanc­e art, story-telling and sewing; this benefitted 142,925 women and girls. Moreover, through PSS, trained officers were deployed at each WGFS to address mental health concerns through awareness programmes, consultati­ons, therapy, mediation sessions, and first aid. The GBV and SRH awareness sessions spanned a wide range of topics, including menstrual hygiene, family planning, women’s rights, child rights, forced and early marriages, mental health, HIV and STIs. These sessions laid the groundwork for further discourse and potential attitude shift, especially among men, benefittin­g 144,448 people in total. Finally, for economic empowermen­t of women, IHHN organised certified 8-week long training courses, led by profession­als in sewing, and beautician skills. These initiative­s profoundly impacted the lives of women as one of them shares, “WGFS has been my foundation during the toughest times. It is where I rediscover­ed hope and resilience.”

In poverty-stricken communitie­s tormented by floods, IHHN emerged as a beacon of hope with its climate-resilient healthcare infrastruc­ture and gendersens­itive emergency responses. It offered critical psychosoci­al support, and empowermen­t opportunit­ies for women and girls in flood-affected areas, highlighti­ng the necessity for inclusive climate resilience strategies.

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