Nairobi — Hospital admissions of children suffering from severe acute malnutrition have spiked in Dagahaley, one of three refugee camps in the Dadaab refugee complex, eastern Kenya, amid worsening humanitarian conditions in the overcrowded camps, says Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). MSF calls on donor countries to urgently release funds for humanitarian assistance in response.
In 2022, MSF teams treated a record 12,007 patients - an overwhelming majority of whom were children - in our paediatric ward and inpatient therapeutic feeding centre in Dagahaley. The figure represents a 33 per cent increase from the preceding year. Consistent with the alarming surge in child admissions, MSF data also shows a gradually increasing trend in the global acute malnutrition rate among children in Dagahaley camp, which reached eight percent during mid-upper arm circumference screening in December 2022. This marks a 45 per cent increase compared to the previous screening in July 2022.
Several complex factors are aggravating the humanitarian situation in Dagahaley, stretching the healthcare capacity in the camp. An ongoing cholera outbreak, declared at the end of October 2022, has gripped the refugee camps, as well as communities in Garissa and Wajir counties. A crippling drought, and prolonged conflict, continue to displace people in the Horn of Africa in search of food and water. And an inadequate humanitarian response as a result of scarce funding is adding further pressure, deepening wide-scale gaps across sectors including water, sanitation and hygiene, nutrition, health, and protection.
Worryingly, forecasts paint a grim outlook for refugees this year. OCHAUnited Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. has predicted the forthcoming rainy season, from March to May, will fail. If so, this would be the sixth consecutive failed rainy season and will exacerbate the scale and severity of the humanitarian emergency in the Horn of Africa. Humanitarian organisations are concerned about expected funding cuts for refugees, which would force them to further downscale operations at a time when needs are rising fast.
MSF, in coordination with the host community and humanitarian organisations, has stepped up our emergency support beyond comprehensive healthcare in Dagahaley camp. We have opened two medical outposts, built 50 latrines, put in place two water tanks and distributed plastic sheeting and floor mats for some 800 newly arrived families residing on the outskirts of the camp. Despite our efforts to target the most vulnerable refugees living on the fringes of the camp, the current humanitarian crisis in Dadaab urgently requires wide-scale response to avert further deterioration.
MSF calls on donors to rapidly release financial assistance, critical to meeting surging lifesaving assistance and protection needs. The UN Refugee Agency has made appeals to donors to mobilise resources for the re-opening of the IFO 2 refugee site, initially closed in 2018, to accommodate up to 80,000 refugees from the congested camps ahead of the approaching dry season when more people are expected to make their way into Dadaab. Unless the donor appeals materialise and urgent action follows up, the incoming influx of refugees can tip the crisis beyond the levels humanitarian organisations can manage, with currently allocated resources.
Refugees in Dadaab have been locked in a 30-year protracted emergency. Even as the immediate priority is to respond to the escalating needs in the camps, it is equally vital to implement durable solutions for refugees.
Dadaab currently hosts over 233,000 registered refugees, many of whom have been living in the camps for over three decades (UNHCR, July 2022) and more than 80,000 unregistered refugees. In 2022 alone, over 50,000 people arrived in Dadaab, yet to be officially registered as refugees.
MSF has been delivering healthcare in and around Dadaab for most of the camp's 30-year existence. Our current programmes are focused in Dagahaley camp, where we provide comprehensive healthcare to refugees and host communities, including basic and specialist care through two health posts and a 92-bed hospital. Our medical services include sexual and reproductive healthcare including emergency obstetrical surgeries, medical and psychological assistance to survivors of sexual and gender-based violence, mental health, home-based insulin care and palliative care.