UNHCR, WHO sign MoU on refugees’ health facilities
PESHAWAR: The UN refugee agency and the World Health Organization on Monday signed a Memorandum of Understanding to assimilate refugee health facilities into mainstream public health services....
By
AFP
|
February 07, 2011
PESHAWAR: The UN refugee agency and the World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to assimilate refugee health facilities into mainstream public health services.
Under the new arrangement, Afghan refugees residing in refugee villages will have access to more sustainable health services supported by the WHO.
The WHO will support the refugee health services by training health workers and will procure medicines and supplies for the refugee programmes in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan and Punjab.
The UN refugee agency has been providing primary healthcare services to Afghan refugees living in camps across Pakistan for the past thirty years.
While Afghans in urban settlements have had access to the WHO-supported public healthcare provided, primarily, for local Pakistani communities.
The WHO, as the lead UN health agency, is assisting Pakistan to improve the People's Health Programme. The agency has been providing technical support to the country, helping in resource mobilization, and working on human resource development for the Health Ministry.
Under the new arrangements, the existing parallel healthcare services by the UNHCR for refugees and WHO more focused on Pakistani communities will merge into one improving services and planning for local Pakistani and Afghan refugee communities alike.