GENEVA,(ST) _ Health Minister Dr. Saad Nayef called on World Health Organization (WHO) to help lift the economic and banking sanctions imposed on Syria, which had a direct impact on the health sector and ensure maximum financial resources to meet increasing health needs of the sick , wounded and the most vulnerable.
In a speech during a session for the World Health Assembly on Wednesday the minister stressed the need for WHO help in securing drugs for chronic diseases and tumor patients and contribute to the rehabilitation of affected health facilities
The minister pointed that before the current crisis, Syria ‘s health sector made remarkable strides, reflected in health indicators, particularly related to mothers and children, noting that 98 % to 100% of children under five year old were immunized, no polio cases were reported since 1995, great steps were achieved in the eradication of measles and that life expectancy is 71.5 year per person compared to 58 year in 1970.
He also noted the great achievements attained in Syria ‘s health sector in terms of infrastructure and human resources with 1921 health centers and 124 public hospitals equipped with highly qualified medical staff of 32 thousand doctors of different specializations..
The Minister continued that Syria has been able in recent years to achieve medicinal self-sufficiency with 72 drug-laboratory cover approximately 93 percent of the local market needs and the Ministry imports only 7% of generic drugs such as vaccines ,oncology and hormonal drugs.
He indicated challenges and common pressures , Syria ‘s health sector is facing, such as population growth and increasing numbers of patients with common chronic diseases caused by lifestyle changes and the high cost of their treatment.
He elaborated that under the current crisis , the Ministry faces new challenges pertinent to the economic blockade imposed on Syria, and attacks by terrorist groups resulted in killing 87 medical personnel , injuring 91 others and, kidnapping 21 and demolishing 54 hospitals and 410 health centers and stealing ,burning more than 400 ambulances and looting of 20 drug-laboratory, whose machines were dismantled, transported and sold in certain neighboring countries illegally.
The Minister of Health emphasized that, in spite of all these challenges, the ministry is making efforts to continue providing free health care services, including open-heart surgery ,kidney transplantation and the treatment of patients with tumors , in collaboration with local and international non-governmental organizations.
T. Fateh