Following weeks of emergency response in Noakhali, Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has handed over its a month-long intervention to the Ministry of Health.
MSF launched the emergency project on 5 September 2024 in response to the catastrophic flooding that displaced hundreds of thousands of people, disrupting essential services and posing severe health risks to vulnerable populations.
“During the devastating flood, roads were damaged, houses were under water, and main water sources were interrupted hindering access to clean and safe drinking water,” said Javed, a local from Maijdee, Noakhali.
“My house was saved from flood water. However, the main road, our paddy fields and pond has been submerged in water. I lost hundreds of thousands of assets. The loss was not mine alone, rather the entire village was affected in many ways.”
In response to this emergency situation, MSF teams, in coordination with local authorities, volunteers and partners, focused on addressing the urgent medical needs caused by widespread water contamination and the destruction of local infrastructure, MSF said on Tuesday.
“The existing healthcare staff simply couldn’t handle the sudden spike of diarrhoea cases, and we were concerned that this situation could pose further risk to people’s health due to the contamination within the hospital,” said Dr Pankaj Paul, MSF Bangladesh deputy medical coordinator.
To handle the overwhelming situation, the MSF team in 250 – bed Noakhali General Hospital established a triage system to prioritise patients based on urgency of need. Additionally, an adult diarrhoea treatment ward was established.
“At the beginning of our emergency response, there were over 500 patients per week at Noakhali General Hospital, but by the time we finished our project, that number was around 300. We are confident that the efforts we've put in the hospital such as the triage will have a lasting impact on the community's resilience,” said Niladri, MSF emergency project coordinator in Bangladesh.
Between 5 September and 4 October, the MSF team treated 1,946 patients for acute watery diarrhoea in the 250-bed Noakhali General Hospital in Maijdee, where more than 63% of the cases were children and 37% were adults.