IOM, the UN Migration Agency, received USD 1,000,000 from the Government of Japan to expand the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC) national Ebola response to other provinces – Kinshasa, Mai Ndombe, Tshopo and South Ubangi – and scale up the response in Equator province.
The funding will be used for the next phase of the national response plan which focuses on “resilience” with an emphasis on strengthening the capacity of the national response around borders. IOM will help screening 100,000 travelers at 30 key points of entry and congregated sites in Kinshasa, Mai-Ndombe, Equator, Tshopo, and South Ubangi provinces where IOM conducts surveillance, risk communication, infection prevention and control, population mobility mapping, and daily flow monitoring. Participatory mobility mapping and flow monitoring helps guide the Ebola response by revealing mobility pathways and volume.
‘’We are continuing our efforts to contain the outbreak of the Ebola Virus from the aspects of human mobility as it is likely to amplify the spread contagious diseases,’’ said Jean-Philippe Chauzy, IOM DRC Chief of Mission. ‘’Our focus has shifted to areas that are very challenging to access, making our partnership with the Congolese Ministry of Health, the World Health Organization (WHO) and governments more important than ever.’’
IOM is an active global health security partner in the DRC, working closely with the Ministry of Health and WHO to put an international health regulation strategy in place, and help implement the strategy at the national and local levels. IOM is appealing for USD 4.5 million to continue strengthening points of entry and international health regulations.
Original source: IOM
Published on 29 June 2018