Title: Fragile States and Countries in Crisis
1Fragile Statesand Countries in Crisis
- Peter Morris (USAID/OFDA)
- Clydette Powell (USAID/HIDN)
2Objectives
- Introduce the concepts of fragile, failing, and
failed states - Describe health challenges in those settings
- Provide examples of countries in crisis where
those concepts and principles apply - Ethiopia
Case study - Analyze how the treatment plan could be
improved
3Did you know?
- There have been almost 400 disaster declarations
around the world in the last 5 years. - Africa 40
- Asia (Pacific) 23
- LAC 18
- Eu, ME, CA 18
4Did you know?
- In the last OFDA report, 75 of the complex
emergencies were in Africa. - USAID has responded in some way to all of these
disaster declarations. - Almost 264 million was provided in assistance
by OFDA.
5Descriptive diagnosis
- Failing lessening ability to provide basic
services and security losing legitimacy
vulnerable to econ downturns, disasters - Failed loss of control over territory, loss of
legitimacy, erosion of social cohesion,
politically motivated violence - Recovering weak but upward trajectory, some
restored capacity to provide services
6Symptoms of failed states
- ruling regime overturned and replaced actions
outside constitution - loss of control of gt 20 land or population to
armed opposition - civil or guerilla war with fatalities gt 1 of
population or , war refugees gt 5 of pop
7Early Warning Signs
8Risk factors for the state ?
9Risk factors in the health sector
- weak and poor quality public health services
- constraints in the health workforce
- endemicity for malaria, HIV/AIDS, TB
- poor water and sanitation
- low immunization coverage
- population pyramid widening base
- destitution leading to commercial sex
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11Early warning signs for health problems?
12Diagnostic tools
- Health
- Systems
- Non health
13Ethiopia 2003-2004 Case Study for Country in
Crisis
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15Humanitarian Profile for Ethiopia 2003
- Characterized as a Hidden Famine with mosaic of
hotspots of excess mortality and malnutrition - Displacement prevented
- Recurrent Drought
- Food insecurity affected 13.2 million
- Coping Mechanisms entitlements and assets
exhausted
16Food First Bias
- Prior famine thinking is that food shortages lead
to starvation (food availability decline FAD) - Famines are not always triggered by decline in
food availability - Death during famine related more to disease than
starvation.
17Approximately 75 percent of Ethiopians have no
access to clean drinking water, like this young
man in Lelu Village, Boke Woreda
Photo by S. Green
18Response Challenges
- Weak PH structures
- Emergency programs in development culture
- Malnutrition and information gap
- Donor coordination
19Failed Structures
- Ministry of Health was recently decentralized
- Majority of budget is with regional health bureau
- Normative function still at Federal level and
leaves little autonomy with regional level.
20- Skilled staff at regional level is thin
- Staffing obtained through required residencies
- Pay considered inadequate
- Little or no community outreach
- MOH unable to scale up to meet emergency needs.
- Lack of health information system
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22Response Challenges
- Design and implementation of emergency public
health strategies - Adequate EPI
- Adequate water
- Adequate and balanced food rations
- Well conceptualized and managed nutrition
interventions.
23Response Challenges
- Primary cause of morbidity malaria
- No tradition of ITNs
- Measles vaccinations inadequate
24Malnutrition
- Acute malnutrition levels over emergency levels
many hotspots at 25 GAM - Therapeutic feeding programs driven by supply and
not demand - Not enough capacity to address therapeutic
feeding needs - Many areas in SNNPR had access problems
- NGO TFCs varied in practice and protocols
- Fear of concentrating under-vaccinated population
in TFCs
25Donor Issues
- Donors saw crisis as sub-clinical and to be
treated with stronger development response rather
than emergency assistance. - Non-Food Assistance was inadequate
- ECHO saw crisis as GOE governance inadequacy
- UNICEF and WHO were slow to react in to hotspots
26What goes awry in any treatment plan?
- unwillingness/inability of state to partner to
address the crisis - tardy registration of implementing partners
- turf battles among implementing partners
- inability to develop trust within the community
- media forces that shape misperception and
response
27What goes awry in any treatment plan? (contd)
- lack of consensus on standardization
- fatigue by implementing partners
- lack of flexibility between relief and
development strategies and funds - lack of experience in dealing with the interplay
between HIV/AIDS, nutritional needs, and food
assistance
28Elements of good treatment plans
- transparency
- accountability
- targeting
- community engagement and participation
- impartiality
- advocacy
- diplomatic deterrence that allows international
intervention - human resource management
- financial management
29Elements of good treatment plans
- solid leadership - quick, decisive, wise
- consensus building
- surge capacity and rapid response teams
- timely and reliable needs assessments
- external awareness and fundraising
- timely provision of food and non-food items
- ability to prioritize needs
- assignment of tasks
- ability to transition from relief to development
30What is needed for Ethiopia?
- Stronger commitment by GOE to addressing PH
crisis - Enhance general care capacities as a means of
improving disaster response
31What is needed ?
- Health and nutrition early warning system
- Develop PH outreach and prevention at the pop
level - Expand clinical capacity in rural areas
- Enhance managerial authority and competence of
regional health officials
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33Delayed implementation of priority health
measures, including surveillance, results in
excess morbidity and mortality
UNHCR photo
34Health and nutrition early warning system
- Linkage of attention to actual indices of health
and nutrition - Deployment of a cadre of professional PH
epidemiologists - Linkage to regional hospitals with a mandate for
training - Linkage of information from health facilities to
survey information
35Lack of consultation with the refugee
populationand women in particularresults in
health services not reaching those in need and
corresponding negative health consequences
UNHCR photo A. Diamond - Afghan refugees in
Pakistan - 1982
36PH outreach and prevention
- Commit to higher level of EPI coverage
- Accelerate recruitment, training, and deployment
of health extension workers - Establish fast track for a School of PH
37Other key sectors are not adequately addressed,
resulting in serious public health threats,
ultimately requiring curative health response
UNHCR photo/R. Darolle Kao I Dang refugee camp,
1983
38Expand clinical capacity
- For serious malnutrition and associated medical
conditions, expand TFCs - Training and resource strategy to phase-out
reliance on international NGOs - Enhance prestige, pay, recognition for health
professionals - CME for management of CHEs
39Managers and health specialists do not adequately
understand the overall health situation of large,
moving or displaced populations.
Curative, clinical care is believed by many to be
the first and dominant priority in all
45 emergencies. Its not. Rarely is it even a
high priority.
UNHCR photo
40Competence of Health Authorities
- Enhance commitment, managerial authority, and
competence - Select for proven capacity for leadership and
organizational competence - Insist on accountability for multi-sectoral
response - Upgrade pharmacy supply chain
- Refine protocols on TFCs, SF, community-based
feeding
41Conclusion