Understanding the factors affecting the humanitarian health and nutrition response for women and children in Somalia since 2000: a case study

Author:

Ahmed Zahra,Ataullahjan AnushkaORCID,Gaffey Michelle F.,Osman Mohamed,Umutoni Chantal,Bhutta Zulfiqar A.,Dalmar Abdirisak A.

Abstract

Abstract Background Somalia has been ravaged by more than two decades of armed conflict causing immense damage to the country’s infrastructure and mass displacement and suffering among its people. An influx of humanitarian actors has sought to provide basic services, including health services for women and children, throughout the conflict. This study aimed to better understand the humanitarian health response for women and children in Somalia since 2000. Methods The study utilized a mixed-methods design. We collated intervention coverage data from publically available large-scale household surveys and we conducted 32 interviews with representatives from government, UN agencies, NGOs, and health facility staff. Qualitative data were analyzed using latent content analysis. Results The available quantitative data on intervention coverage in Somalia are extremely limited, making it difficult to discern patterns or trends over time or by region. Underlying sociocultural and other contextual factors most strongly affecting the humanitarian health response for women and children included clan dynamics and female disempowerment. The most salient operational influences included the assessment of population needs, donors’ priorities, and insufficient and inflexible funding. Key barriers to service delivery included chronic commodity and human resource shortages, poor infrastructure, and limited access to highly vulnerable populations, all against the backdrop of ongoing insecurity. Various strategies to mitigate these barriers were discussed. In-country coordination of humanitarian health actors and their activities has improved over time, with federal and state-level ministries of health playing increasingly active roles. Conclusions Emerging recommendations include further exploration of government partnerships with private-sector service providers to make services available throughout Somalia free of charge, with further research on innovative uses of technology to help reaches remote and inaccessible areas. To mitigate chronic skilled health worker shortages, more operational research is needed on the expanded use of community health workers. Persistent gaps in service provision across the continuum must be addressed, including for adolescents, for example. The is also a clear need for longer term development focus to enable the provision of health and nutrition services for women and children beyond those included in recurrent emergency response.

Funder

International Development Research Centre

Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

UNICEF

Partnership for Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health

Family Larsson‐Rosenquist Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

Reference20 articles.

1. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Somaliai: Humanitarian Response Plan (January-December 2019). 2019.

2. Uppsala Conflict Data Program. Battle Related Deaths. In: Uppsala Conflict Data Program, editor. 200– 2017.

3. Gleditsch NP, Wallensteen P, Eriksson M, Sollenberg M, Strand H. Armed conflict 1946-2001: a new dataset. J Peace Res. 2002;39(5):615–37.

4. FSNAU. Technical Release: 1.5 million people in Somalia still facing acute food security crisis or worse outcom. Mogadishu/Washington; 2018.

5. Save the Children. The Urban Disadvantage: State of the World's Mothers 2015. 2015.

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