Health

Evidence on Efforts to Mitigate the Negative Educational Impact of Past Disease Outbreaks

Year of Publication
2020
Document Publisher/Creator
Joe Hallgarten
Institution/organisation
K4D (Knowledge, Evidence and Learning for Development)
NGO associated?
Source URL
https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/20.500.12413/15202
Summary
This rapid review focusses on efforts to mitigate the educational impact of previous disease outbreaks, concentrating on school-age learners. It follows two companion papers that reviewed broader secondary effects and attempts to mitigate them (Rohwerder, 2020; Kelly, 2020). It aims to inform the education sector’s responses to the COVID-19 crisis, although there are important differences between previous disease outbreaks and the COVID-19 situation. For instance, unlike Ebola, transmission of COVID-19 is asymptomatic, and the outbreak is global. This review finds a limited range of quantitative evidence on the educational impact of disease outbreaks, and minimal evidence on mitigation measures or their impact. Although several ‘lessons learned’ documents include guidelines and recommendations (and now complemented by many education-focused COVID-responsive blogs), this review finds that these are rarely based on evidence of impact of particular interventions, or on evidence of the impact of different approaches to action, co-ordinations, funding or prioritisation. The review found four particular evidence gaps: First, how distance learning materials can support learners who do not have access to family members with the skills or time to help them. Second, a gap in the use of screen or internet-enabled technologies to support alternative education. Third (and related), a gap in remote teacher training and development during school closures. Finally, the review analysed gender and equity issues but did not find any literature that explored disability. The education in emergencies literature has an emerging evidence base across all four themes within refugee education contexts, but has not yet learnt from or applied this evidence to disease outbreak situations.
Date of Publication
15/09/2020

Food Security and Nutrition Vulnerability and Risk Analysis in Former Warrap and Northern Bahr el Ghazal States

Year of Publication
2018
Document Publisher/Creator
Augustino T. Mayai, Zacharia D. Akol and Et al
Institution/organisation
The Sudd Institute
NGO associated?
Source URL
https://www.suddinstitute.org/publications/show/5ad737a42c099
Summary
The trends reported in the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) show a growing food security crisis in South Sudan, with a high proportion of people sliding into crisis and emergency food insecurity level. The underlying fears concern an emerging acute lack of food in almost all parts of the country, with millions of people, many of them rural women and children, affected. At the peak of the lean season in August to September 2016, Northern Bahr el Ghazal had 72% of its population facing crisis and emergency[1] level. It should also be noted that Northern Bahr el Ghazal’s food security indicators continue to be alarming with 62% of the population being severely food insecure (phase 3,4,5) by the peak of the lean season (July)[2]. In January 2017, the Sudd Institute, with generous support from Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, explored the proximal risk factors undermining food security resilience and triggering or perpetuating emergency level vulnerabilities in the former states of Warrap and Northern Bahr el Ghazal. Examining 6 major assumptions using Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) tools to draw important information from rural households, the results are instructive and in direction of our expectation. They provide insights into appropriate response options for combating food security vulnerability in the region that is nearly sliding into famine. We outline the key results as follows.
Date of Publication
30/09/2020

Responding to COVID-19 in South Sudan

Year of Publication
2020
Document Publisher/Creator
The Rift Valley Institute
Institution/organisation
The Rift Valley Institute
Topic
NGO associated?
Summary
South Sudan has, up to the time of writing, avoided the worst effects of the global coronavirus pandemic. However, as the disease spreads further through the African continent, South Sudan—and other countries in the Greater Horn of Africa region—need to carefully calibrate their response to prevent a dangerous escalation. Of critical importance to this is the need to take into account local knowledge and expertise. Drawing on the RVI's network of South Sudanese researchers, this note reflects shared findings and recommended actions collated by a team of nine male and female researchers working in urban, rural and cattle camp locations across the country. It focuses on 6 key areas: public messaging; epidemic management; economic considerations; the politics of the response; risks of conflict; and international agency and donor tactics.
Date of Publication
05/10/2020

'We are subjects, not objects in health' Communities taking action on COVID-19

Year of Publication
2020
Document Publisher/Creator
Lowenson R, Colvin C and Et al
Topic
NGO associated?
Source URL
https://www.csrf-southsudan.org/covid19/we-are-subjects-not-objects-in-health-communities-taking-action-on-covid-19/
Summary
This document provides evidence of practical and affirmative options of people-centered, participatory forms of community organizing and engagement in diverse areas of prevention, care and wider social protection in responding to COVID-19. The 42 case studies from different regions intend to inspire, inform and support.
Date of Publication
14/10/2020

WHO Country Cooperation Strategy

Year of Publication
2014
Document Publisher/Creator
WHO
Topic
NGO associated?
Summary
South Sudan has some of the worst health outcome indicators globally, in spite of modest
improvements over the last five years. Maternal mortality ratio has stagnated at 2054 per
100 000. Mortality rate for infants and children under five years declined from 102 and 135
in 2006 to 75 and 104 in 2012 per 1000 live births respectively. The significant disparity in
health status across socio-demographic factors and geographical location is well
documented.
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The Snakebite Programme in Agok

Year of Publication
2020
Document Publisher/Creator
South Sudan Medical Journal (SSMJ)
Topic
NGO associated?
Source URL
http://www.southsudanmedicaljournal.com/
Summary
Due to increasing cases and requests from many developing countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) designated snakebite as a neglected tropical disease of high priority in 2017. According to WHO, “bites by venomous snakes can cause acute medical emergencies involving severe paralysis that may prevent breathing, cause bleeding disorders that can lead to fatal haemorrhage, cause irreversible kidney failure and severe local tissue destruction that can cause permanent disability and limb amputation.”
The data coming out of the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)snakebite programme in Agok are a cause for concern for this medical emergency (See article on page 146).[2] With no centralized data on snakebites from across the country, this bellwether programme should be celebrated and replicated. Different states have varied rates and incidences of snakebites and one size fits interventions may not be relevant. However, a clear programme would put snakebite high on the agenda and help prevent needless deaths. When there are no specific integrated programmes, individuals resort to traditional and ineffective remedies for snakebites which could do more harm than good. This issue is compounded by the lack of anti-venoms, awareness by health workers, poor training and appropriate treatment guidelines and protocols. The Ministry of Health and all relevant NGOs should ramp up efforts to expand the snakebite programmes by integrating them into the primary healthcare system, developing awareness and training materials, as well as ensuring the availability of anti-venom as part of the essential drugs list. The MSF programme in Agok has shown that it can be done.
Attachment
Date of Publication
18/12/2020

Sexual and Gender-Based Violence and Torture Experiences of Sudanese Refugees in Northern Uganda: Health and Justice Response

Year of Publication
2020
Document Publisher/Creator
Helen Liebling, Hazel Barrett and Lillian Artz
Topic
NGO associated?
Source URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17051685
Summary
This British Academy/Leverhulme-funded research investigated the health and justice service responses to the needs of South Sudanese refugees living in refugee settlements in Northern Uganda who had been subjected to sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) and torture. It involved the collection and thematic analysis of the narratives of 20 men and 41 women who were refugee survivors of SGBV and torture, including their experiences in South Sudan, their journeys to Uganda and experiences in refugee settlements, in particular their access to health and justice services.

Thirty-seven key stakeholders including international, government, non-government organisations and civil society organisations were also interviewed regarding their experiences of providing health and justice services to refugees. All refugees had survived human rights abuses mainly carried out in South Sudan but some had also occurred on route to Uganda and within Uganda. Despite the significant impact of their experiences, the analysis indicated that there was limited service response in refugee settlements in Northern Uganda once the immediate humanitarian crisis ended. The thematic analysis indicated five main themes coming from the interviews. These included: the nature of refugee experiences of SGBV and torture, including domestic violence and child abduction and forced marriage; issues associated with service provision such as lack of adequate screening and under resourcing of health and justice services; a lack of gender sensitivity and specialist services, particularly for men; the sustained involvement of civil society organisations and local non-governmental organisations in providing counselling and offering emotional support and hope to survivors; and enhancing health and justice responses and services to improve refugee recovery, dignity and resilience. The authors recommend that integrated gendered and culturally sensitive service provision should be adopted, which brings together formal and informal health, justice services and survivor support programmes.
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Date of Publication
27/01/2021

The Economic Impacts of COVID-19 Pandemic in South Sudan: An Update

Year of Publication
2021
Document Publisher/Creator
Augustino T. Mayai
Institution/organisation
The Sudd Institute
Topic
NGO associated?
Source URL
https://www.suddinstitute.org/publications/show/600ff941903ac
Summary
his policy brief studies the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in South Sudan. The findings are educative. First, the health effects of the pandemic in the country have been surprisingly less pronounced than expected, marked by very low morbidity and fatality rates. Second, despite this positive health news, the pandemic has had negative effects on the economy, starting with dramatic declines in domestic production and revenue collection, followed by a very volatile rising cost of living. These economic consequences are far-reaching, severely weakening, for example, human capital formation, especially in education, as the lockdown has deprived some 2 million school-age children of learning opportunities. Finally, economic recovery from COVID-19 will require a coordinated strategy that fosters broadened synergies in response to sector-specific COVID-19 ramifications. Interventions that prioritize smaller firms and women enterprises should be in order.
Date of Publication
01/02/2021