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Burkina Faso: A humanitarian crisis you probably haven’t heard of

23 Apr 20
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Burkina Faso: A humanitarian crisis you probably haven’t heard of

MSF has set up two water distribution sites in Djibo following a massive influx of internally displaced people, which has increased the need for water and healthcare Caption
MSF has set up two water distribution sites in Djibo following a massive influx of internally displaced people, which has increased the need for water and healthcare

Picture being forced to flee your home as armed conflict ravages your once relatively peaceful country.

Last year’s harvests were poor and you’re already weak and vulnerable – but the annual food shortage season is still to come. 

It’s nearly impossible to see a doctor, with health centres closing due to the ongoing insecurity, and now there’s a deadly and highly contagious virus sweeping the world and crippling even the most advanced health systems. 

This is the situation facing many people in Burkina Faso, a landlocked country in West Africa that is experiencing a fast-growing humanitarian crisis. 

In the space of just a few months, more than one million people have been displaced by widespread violence (as of October 2020), which has forced more than 100 health facilities to close. 

This has left Burkina Faso grossly unequipped to deal with COVID-19. 

UPDATE: Read the latest story from Burkina Faso

A crisis within a pandemic

Since the country confirmed its first case on 9 March, the virus has rapidly taken hold with outbreaks in nine of its 13 regions.

It is now one of the hardest-hit countries in sub-Saharan Africa, with 581 cases and 38 deaths as of 22 April. 

​“We fear that the new coronavirus will have a huge impact,” said Hassan Maïyaki, MSF’s country manager in Burkina Faso. “This pandemic will amplify existing problems. 

Samar is 3 years old. She came with her father to the MSF medical point to receive wound care. Samar was going with her father out of their building on the day of the explosion and the steal gate caused her facial injuries and burns. She already had reconstructive plastic surgery. MSF has established a fixed point in the Mar Mikhael and Karantina neighborhoods in Beirut, two of the areas most impacted by the blast, to provide medical support to the people affected by the explosion. The team provides wound care (dressings), rapid consultations for people with non-communicable diseases, as well as psychological first aid.

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"In such an unstable security context, with a weakened health system and difficult access to populations, humanitarian organisations, including MSF, are finding it difficult to prepare for this critical period. And the COVID-19 pandemic is going to make our task that much harder."

HASSAN MAIYAKI
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MSF COUNTRY MANAGER IN BURKINA FASO

“There are more than 800,000 internally displaced people in Burkina Faso and the UN estimates that more than two million people will need humanitarian assistance this year.

“The majority of these people are living in poor conditions, with insufficient access to clean water or healthcare, and many other unmet needs.”

Critical food shortages

According to the World Food Programme, over a million people currently don’t have enough to eat and this could rise to 2.1 million during the annual food shortage season in June. 

Hassan said the assistance provided so far has been insufficient and, until a few weeks ago, the most urgent priority was to increase aid and find ways to access people in remote areas. 

However, with the arrival of COVID-19, MSF’s focus has had to shift to controlling the spread of the virus. 

During the rainy season in Burkina Faso, roads become impassable, making access to healthcare even more difficult. Here, people help an MSF nurse cross a flooded roadway by carrying his motorcycle Caption
During the rainy season in Burkina Faso, roads become impassable, making access to healthcare even more difficult. Here, people help an MSF nurse cross a flooded roadway by carrying his motorcycle

“In the coming weeks we will have to find a balance between our response to COVID-19 and the humanitarian crisis, so that we do not allow other diseases, such as malariameaslesmeningitis or cholera, to spread and claim as many, if not more, victims than the virus,” said Hassan.

“In addition, many unknowns remain about how the coronavirus interacts with other diseases, such as malaria and dengue fever, or its impact on malnourished children with poor immune systems. 

“Humanitarian organisations must continue to focus on the ongoing humanitarian crisis, while at the same time fighting against COVID-19 – otherwise we risk facing an even bigger humanitarian tragedy in the coming months.”

Delivering aid where it's needed most

MSF first worked in Burkina Faso in 1995. Today, our teams deliver medical aid to local and displaced communities throughout the country, through mobile clinics and in the medical centre we support in Djibo.

We also run preventive programmes, distribute drinking water and train community health workers to treat common ailments such as malaria.

We are now preparing to support the health authorities’ COVID-19 response while adapting our regular medical activities.

In addition to supporting the Djibo medical and surgical centre in northern Burkina Faso, MSF has set up two health posts in the town, where displaced people can access free healthcare. Here, an MSF medic checks a woman's vitals Caption
In addition to supporting the Djibo medical and surgical centre in northern Burkina Faso, MSF has set up two health posts in the town, where displaced people can access free healthcare. Here, an MSF medic checks a woman's vitals

Hassan said the COVID-19 situation is currently under control, but this could quickly change. 

“As we have seen elsewhere, no country was prepared to deal with a huge influx of COVID-19 patients, some of whom have severe complications,” he said. 

“It is therefore necessary to increase hospital capacity so that we will be able to care for all patients that contract COVID-19 as soon as possible, and to be prepared for a possible widespread outbreak in the coming days.”

We are looking at ways we can help contain the outbreak by identifying and caring for COVID-19 patients and strengthening preventive measures.

“This includes explaining prevention measures such as proper handwashing to the community, as well as reviewing how patients move through hospital wards to avoid further contamination and setting up isolation wards,” said Hassan.

“We are also strengthening infection prevention and control measures wherever we work to ensure the protection of health staff and the patients they care for.

“It is essential to strengthen measures to protect healthcare workers so that they can continue to provide care without themselves becoming infected with the coronavirus.”

In Bobo Dioulasso, the second worst-affected city in Burkina Faso, we have started to care for COVID-19 patients in a dedicated facility.

The challenges

A major challenge for our teams is trying to provide medical assistance in conflict-affected areas and deploying staff and supplies amid international restrictions to prevent the spread of COVID-19. 

We are working to quickly overcome these challenges to ensure we can continue providing life-saving medical aid when the seasonal peaks of child malnutrition and malaria begin in June.

"In such an unstable security context, with a weakened health system and difficult access to populations, humanitarian organisations, including MSF, are finding it difficult to prepare for this critical period. And the COVID-19 pandemic is going to make our task that much harder,” said Hassan.

MSF in Burkina Faso

Burkina Faso experienced an upsurge in violence in 2019, leading to mass displacement and severely restricting access to health services in the affected regions.

In early January 2019, violent clashes in Yirgou in the north of the country forced thousands of people to flee. The violence, involving both communal and religious armed groups, quickly escalated.

Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams, who were already in the Sahel region to support emergency rooms and operating theatres, rapidly responded in Barsalogho and Foubé in central Burkina Faso, providing basic healthcare for host communities and displaced people.