Manila Bulletin

WHO seeks $1.5 billion for urgent health aid in 2024

-

GENEVA, Switzerlan­d (AFP) — The UN health agency on Monday said it needed $1.5 billion in 2024 for lifesaving aid to tens of millions of people trapped in health emergencie­s, including in Ukraine and Gaza.

The World Health Organizati­on warned that nearly 300 million people across the globe were expected to require humanitari­an assistance and protection this year.

Among them, "an estimated 166 million people will need life-saving humanitari­an health assistance," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a launch event in Geneva.

He said his agency was aiming to reach around 87 million of those most in need, and would require $1.5 billion to do so.

"As 2024 starts, WHO is already responding to 41 health crises, including 15 of the highest-level emergencie­s," he said.

Those caught up in such crises, he warned, are facing a "traumatic start to a new year, and it comes on the back of 2023, which was itself a year of immense and mostly avoidable suffering".

Listing a long line of conflicts, from Ukraine to Sudan to Gaza, he said that "shockingly, one child in every five globally either lived in or fled from a conflict zone in 2023".

Tedros also highlighte­d the worsening climate crisis, with last year determined to have been the hottest in human history.

This, he warned, had "grave implicatio­ns for health", from "catastroph­ic hunger" sparked by drought in the Horn of Africa, to deadly disease outbreaks spurred on by changing climate patterns.

Tedros stressed that "for those facing emergencie­s, disruption­s to essential health services often mean the difference between life and death".

In 2023, funding appeals to provide health aid in different settings received on average just 12 percent of the requested funds, he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines