Project Report
| Jan 18, 2021
About SEMA isolation hospital in Kafar Takharim
By Baraa AlSharbaji | Fundraising Officer
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Through its three isolation centers in north of Syria, the Syrian Expatriate Medical Association (SEMA) is working on preventing the spread of the COVID-19 disease, protecting the civilians and securing the needed health care as well as a safe place to isolate the patients affected by this pandemic. SEMA isolation hospital in Kafr Takharim in rural Idleb is one of these hospitals that have been dedicated to deal with and manage the cases infected with the Coronavirus.
The hospital comprises many sections among which is the intensive care unit which includes 10 ICU beds, and 50 beds for recovery and for medium-risk cases. The hospital is supported by a laboratory and all other supplies which are needed to address the needs of the COVID-19 cases.
SEMA is currently supporting the three isolation hospitals, which is half the number of all isolation centers located in north of Syria – as there are six hospitals in total – and has provided them with all requirements and medical equipment needed for meeting the needs of COVID-19 patients.
Help us to continue saving the lives of the most vulnerable people of those infected with the Coronavirus in northern Syria …
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Jan 31, 2021
Najah Story
By Baraa AlSharbaji | Fundraising Officer
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“When I was infected with the Coronavirus, my body lost its power and medication did not help; pain pervaded all over my body, and the fever made me feel cold from time to time”; with these words, Najah described her suffering from the COVID-19 disease.
Apart from the suffering that the COVID-19 patients live, the harsh circumstances in Syria made most adult men and women, like Najah, to be the breadwinner for many people. Najah takes care of two of her grandchildren, and she worriedly does not know who is looking after them during her absence for the treatment.
Najah is one of the women beneficiaries who is still receiving health care through SEMA isolation hospital in Kafr Takharim city; the hospital is one of SEMA’s three centers that are concerned with managing and dealing with cases infected with Coronavirus (COVID-19) in north of Syria. SEMA wishes speedy recovery for Najah and all COVID-19 patients.
Help us to continue saving the lives of the most vulnerable people of those infected with the Coronavirus in north of Syria
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Dec 3, 2020
SEMA runs three COVID-19 Hospitals in NW Syria
By Baraa AlSharbaji | Fundraising Officer
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SEMA INSANI VE TIBBI YARDIM DERNEGI (SEMA) has participated in the response for the spread of the Coronavirus in northwest Syria since its beginning, and it assumed the responsibility to equip and operate three of the COVID-19 hospitals working in north of Syria (which is half of the existing number). The three hospitals are located in Idleb, Kafar Takharim, and Jisr Ash-Shugur and they contain 25 ICU beds and ventilators as well as 130 recovery beds. As the northern areas of Syria reaches the peak of infections, considerable challenges are encountered in the isolation hospitals and they are defined as the following:
- Delay in receiving oxygen cylinders, and this is caused by the delay from suppliers, leading to a great gap in securing the required oxygen, the price of which has risen by four times the usual price.
- Limited financial resources to support the hospitals, which led to a severe shortage in medicine, supplies, ICU drugs and personal protective equipment.
- Hospitals are full of infected patients and they are working at full capacity although having serious lack of qualified staff.
- A relatively large number of the medical staff got infected with the disease and the hospitals are not able to compensate them due to the scarcity of the medical staff.
- Complete absence of the private sector’s role in the response.
The total number of patients who were received at the three hospitals of SEMA reached 291 patients over three months, 57 of them were in need of intensive care, while number of death cases among them was 7.
It is worth to note that all of the mentioned cases had symptoms that ranged between moderate to severe.
SEMA relentlessly tries to continue providing the needed support and ensure the maximum operation of these hospitals through communicating with international donors and partners. Indeed, SEMA could secure many of the needed equipment and supplies during the first and second weeks of November. However, there is still an urgent need which cannot be postponed and your support is what we count on to guarantee the continuity of work and treatment for all the new infected cases; these needs can be presented as the following:
- Providing a shipment of urgent medications to bridge the gap (30% of the needs, which are enough for the hospitals for two months, are for ICU drugs and 70% for other medicines).
- Providing the basic equipment required for the laboratories and intensive care (drug pumps, coagulation monitoring devices, 10 CPAP devices …etc.).
- Urgently securing the needed staff to meet the severe shortage in the human resources in the hospital.
Your support today will secure a continuous treatment for the patients and will save the lives of more infected people!
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