Ivory Coast: Access to care under serious threat

London, MARCH 25, 2011 — Ivory Coast is experiencing a new spiral of violence that is endangering people’s access to medical care. Confrontations raging in parts of the city of Abidjan and in the western part of the country have displaced tens thousands of people. Facing the same insecurity as the rest of the population, health care workers are fleeing medical facilities in the conflict areas.  Shortages of medicines are only exacerbating the problem of reduced access to care.

In Abidjan, health authorities report that nearly all medical workers in six hospitals have fled as a result of the insecurity. Only one hospital in the Abobo neighbourhood, Abobo Sud, is functional.  MSF has been working in the hospital since late February, handling medical and surgical emergencies in cooperation with the Ministry of Health. Medical teams there have treated 273 emergency patients over the past three weeks, 225 of whom had bullet wounds. Women and children have died of their injuries.

ivory coast victims“We heard gunfire in Abobo every day,” said Dr. Okanta Chibuzo, an MSF emergency doctor who recently returned from an assignment in Abidjan. “We admitted 10 to 15 wounded people every day.”

On March 17, the Abobo market was attacked; wounded people filled the hospital. MSF teams working with Ministry of Health staff treated 66 people with bullet or shell wounds. None could be brought to the hospital by ambulance.

“Some of the wounded were brought in trucks that usually transport food,” said Dr. Chibuzo. “All of them were urgent cases.”

Patients with common illnesses also need care. However, access is very limited, particularly for children with acute illnesses, pregnant women and people living with chronic diseases.  People are also afraid to leave their homes to seek treatment.

The outburst of violence in Ivory Coast has led people to seek refuge in locations believed to be more secure. In Abidjan, residents have fled en masse to improvised reception sites, or have returned to their home villages.

Tens of thousands of Ivoirians have sought refuge in neighbouring Liberia, where MSF’s mobile teams provide care. Population movements in the western part of Ivory Coast began in December.  While some people have returned to areas south of Danané, the front line is shifting further south and increased fighting in the Guiglo area has led to further displacements of people.

The population’s access to assistance in the western region is a serious challenge.

“Health centres no longer operate—or provide extremely limited services—because medical staff has left, they lack drugs and medical supplies, and because some have been looted,” said Renzo Fricke, MSF emergency coordinator.

MSF teams are providing primary health care in many towns and villages on both sides of the front lines and are supporting several hospitals. However, the proximity to the fighting complicates the teams’ ability to travel.

The country’s banking system and business networks are also paralysed. Coupled with transportation problems, this has led to serious disruptions in the distribution and supply of medicines in several regions of the country.