• Today, the conflict in Sudan reaches its 1000th day, with over 20 million people requiring health assistance and 21 million desperately needing food. • Nearly three years of continuous violence, severe access constraints, and reduced funding have turned Sudan into the worst humanitarian crisis globally. • An estimated 33.7 million people will need humanitarian aid this year. • The health system has been severely damaged by ongoing fighting, increasingly deadly attacks on health care, mass displacement, lack of essential medical supplies, and shortages of health personnel and funding. • Despite sustained efforts by WHO and partners to restore and revive health services across the country, more than one third of health facilities (37%) remain non-functional, depriving millions of people of essential and lifesaving health services. • Since the start of the conflict in April 2023, WHO has verified 201 attacks on health care, resulting in 1858 deaths and 490 injuries.
Article Summaries:
- Sudan marks 1,000 days of conflict, deepening the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. Over 20 million people need health care and 21 million require food, while 33.7 million are projected to need aid this year. The health system is crippled: 37 % of facilities are non‑functional, and WHO has documented 201 attacks on health care, killing 1,858 people and injuring 490. WHO and partners have delivered 3,378 metric tons of medicines worth $40 million, vaccinated 24 million against cholera, treated 112 k children with severe malnutrition, and supported 3.3 million patients across hospitals and mobile clinics. Displacement stands at 13.6 million, the largest global crisis, amid outbreaks of cholera, dengue, malaria and measles.
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