Nearly three years of continuous violence, severe access constraints, and reduced funding have turned Sudan into the worst humanitarian crisis globally, according to World Health Organization (WHO).
In a statement released on Saturday revealed that an estimated 33.7 million people will need humanitarian aid this year as the conflict in Sudan reaches its 1000th day, with over 20 million people requiring health assistance and 21 million desperately needing food.
WHO said, the health system has been severely damaged by ongoing fighting, increasingly deadly attacks on health care, mass displacement, lack of essential medical supplies, and shortages of health personnel and funding.
Despite sustained efforts by WHO and partners to restore and revive health services across the country, more than one third of health facilities (37%) remain non-functional, depriving millions of people of essential and lifesaving health services.
Since the start of the conflict in April 2023, WHO has verified 201 attacks on health care, resulting in 1858 deaths and 490 injuries. Attacks violate international humanitarian law, undermine access to lifesaving care, put health care workers, patients and caregivers at grave risk.
“One thousand days of conflict in Sudan have driven the health system to the brink of collapse. Under the strain of disease, hunger and a lack of access to basic services, people face a devastating situation,” said WHO Representative in Sudan, Dr Shible Sahbani.
The level of displacement is unprecedented. An estimated 13.6 million people are currently displaced, making Sudan the largest displacement crisis in the world.
Fueled by poor living conditions, overcrowding in displacement sites, disrupted health and water, sanitation and hygiene services, and a breakdown of routine immunization, disease outbreaks are spreading, compounding the crisis.
Access to preventive and curative care, including for the management of chronic conditions and severe malnutrition, remains limited.
WHO works with Sudan’s Federal and State Ministries of Health and partners to improve access to critical health services across Sudan and rehabilitate the health system.
About 24 million people have received cholera vaccinations, and WHO has supported the country to introduce and scale up malaria vaccines. Additionally, more than 3.3 million have accessed health care at WHO-supported hospitals, primary health care facilities, and temporary mobile clinics.
Revealing further that over 112,400 children with severe acute malnutrition with medical complications received treatment at functional stabilization centres, all of which receive lifesaving WHO nutrition supplies.
State and National public health laboratories have been equipped and strengthened to confirm disease outbreaks and enable a rapid response.