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Direct Relief Responds to Severe Flooding in Bolivia
26 Mar 2007 16:35:49 GMT
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Direct Relief International is responding to the severe flooding that has plagued Bolivia since January. Two emergency air shipments were sent last week to healthcare providers in Bolivia to help them address the large number of cases of acute respiratory infections, diarrhea, skin diseases, and dengue fever resulting from the flooding.

The assistance, valued at $403,517 (wholesale), includes basic antibiotics, analgesics, oral rehydration salts, medicated topical creams, and assorted basic care materials like bandages and dressings. The support has been provided to two in-country health partners, PROSALUD and Population Services International (PSI).

PROSALUD, Bolivia's largest health non-governmental organization, operates 32 health facilities in six of Bolivia's nine departments. The organization provides primary care to low-income urban and peri-urban communities, complemented by two referral hospitals and one child development center. PROSALUD is based in Santa Cruz, an area severely affected by the flooding.

PSI has been active in Bolivia since 1995 and closely collaborates with the Bolivian Ministry of Health, the World Food Program, UNICEF, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), and a range of local NGOs. With facilities in the departments of Beni and Pando, PSI focuses on malaria and maternal and child health treatment, and provides health education for the indigenous population.

After nearly three months of heavy rain in Bolivia, UNICEF estimates that as many as 400,000 people have been affected by the worst floods in 25 years. Moreover, thousands of homes have been destroyed, crops have been lost, roads have become impassable, and at least 40 people have been reported dead.

The rains have greatly affected the eastern province of Santa Cruz, the countrys agricultural center. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reports indicate that some 71,000 hectares of crops have been partially or totally lost. The thousands of people that previously evacuated are now living in camps, tents, or have taken refuge in churches and schools.

Direct Relief has worked with partner healthcare providers in Bolivia since the 1970s providing over $5.5 million (wholesale) of medical assistance. This support has included both ongoing health support and emergency response to flooding in 2003, as well as for flooding and earthquake recovery efforts in 1998.

About Direct Relief International
Founded in 1948, Direct Relief International is a Santa Barbara, California-based non-profit organization focused on improving the quality of life by bringing critically needed medicines and supplies to local healthcare providers worldwide. In 2006, Direct Relief provided over $200 million in direct aid through medical material assistance and targeted cash grants to more than 300 healthcare facilities and organizations in 56 countries, serving 23.8 million people. Forbes recognized Direct Relief for the fifth consecutive year as one of only eight non-profit organizations in the United States that is 100 percent efficient in fundraising.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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A public health worker sprinkles mosquito poison during a survey in a slum, as the dengue epidemic continues to expand across Brazil and much of Latin America, in Belem at the mouth of the Amazon River, April 27, 2007. With more than 4650 cases reported across Para State in just the first four months of this year, this year's pandemic caused by the mosquito-transmitted virus is expected to rival the record outbreak of 2001, in spite of the fact that only one in 20 cases is reported to public health officials.



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