Strengthening the Humanitarian Supply Chain, Post-Earthquake

Staff from the Syrian American Medical Society organize medical aid from Direct Relief that arrived last week to support medical facilities operating in northwestern Syria. (SAMS photo)

It’s been three weeks since a devastating 7.8-magnitude earthquake rocked southern Turkey and northwestern Syria, with the scale of the disaster coming into sharper focus since.

More than 44,000 people have lost their lives due to the earthquakes, and more than 2.2 million people have been displaced or evacuated, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

More than 9,000 aftershocks have occurred and continue, including a 5.2-magnitude quake that rattled southern Turkey on Monday.

More than 9 million people were directly affected by the earthquakes, and more than 520,000 housing units collapsed or were destroyed.

Since the earthquake reverberated throughout the region on Feb. 6, Direct Relief has shipped or is shipping more than 109 tons of medical aid for Turkey and Syria, including antibiotics, wound care dressings, protective gear, and other requested medical resources.

Staff from Direct Relief and UMKE, the Turkish National Medical Rescue Team, assess needs in earthquake-impacted Kahramanmaraş, Turkey, on Feb. 20 2023. (Brea Burkholz/Direct Relief)

Groups supported with medical aid include Turkey’s Ministry of Health, Ahbap, AKUT, Syrian American Medical Society, Independent Doctor’s Association, and Syrian Relief and Development.

A recent shipment for the Syrian American Medical Society was announced over the weekend and is supporting the medical supply chain for hospitals operating in the area.

The organization has been responding to the series of earthquakes that continue to rock the region. SAMS posted that five of the organization’s hospitals in Syria received at least 30 injured from the early evening 6.4-magnitude earthquake on Feb. 20.

“SAMS’ 2,400 staff in the region–nearly half of whom were displaced by the disaster–continue to provide urgent medical and other assistance to the thousands of casualties, many requiring long-term therapeutic as well as mental health support,” the organization stated.

“Despite four of SAMS’ hospitals being significantly damaged in the February 6 earthquake, rendering one inoperable, SAMS continues to provide comprehensive medical care.”

Direct Relief committed an additional $1 million to SAMS to offset costs needed to purchase medicines and supplies in country. The amount adds to a prior $600,000 granted to the organization for emergency operations funds, expand capacity for trauma response and cover costs for diesel fuel for ambulances and generators.

Financial support

In addition to continuous deployments of medical aid, Direct Relief is infusing cash support to local organizations scaling up to meet the needs of the moment. More than $2.5 million in financial aid has been committed.

In Turkey

In Syria

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