COVID-19: Bangladesh has less than 2,000 ventilators serving a population of 165m, warns Save the Children

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Source: Save The Children

No ventilators in Cox’s Bazar District, home to more than three million people including one million Rohingya refugees

COX’S BAZAR, April 6 – Save the Children is urgently calling for international assistance to help Bangladesh meet a surge in demand for ventilators to cope with the COVID19 outbreak and to help avert a humanitarian disaster in the country. Most of the country’s intensive care beds and ventilators are in the major urban centres including the capital Dhaka, making it difficult for remote communities to access. There are reportedly 1,769 ventilators in Bangladesh at this moment or in the pipeline, which means an average of one ventilator for every 93,273 people.  

Save the Children is also concerned for the estimated 3.3 million people who live in Cox’s Bazar District in southeastern Bangladesh, one million of whom are Rohingya refugees living in cramped conditions with limited access to adequate hygiene and health facilities. The acute scarcity of ventilators in the district means lives will be lost when COVID-19 starts to spread more widely in the community.

Save the Children is calling for a single global plan to help confront one of the biggest threats to global health and security in modern times. This plan must be underpinned by debt relief, increased financing for public health, liquidity and safety nets for the most vulnerable, and effective coordination. 

Dr Shamim Jahan, Deputy Country Director for Save the Children in Bangladesh, said:

“At present it is difficult for Bangladesh to meet the expected surge in demand for ventilators to help respond to the COVID-19 outbreak. We are in this together – no single country can confront COVID-19 alone, even the richest and most powerful among us. It is therefore essential that world leaders – in particular the G20 countries – commit to a coordinated global plan under-pinned by debt relief. We also urge the Bangladesh government to engage the public and private sectors urgently to secure ventilators for COVID-19 patients.”

Athena Rayburn, Save the Children’s Rohingya Response Advocacy Manager, said:

“Without access to intensive care facilities in Cox’s Bazar, patients in critical condition may have to be transported to neighboring Chittagong district 150 kilometers away, further increasing the risk to them and others. Ventilators and people trained to operate them are urgently needed to protect the host communities and  Rohingya refugees to avert a humanitarian disaster if we start to see community-level transmission of COVID-19. Children are at serious risk of contracting the virus, but also of being orphaned or neglected if family members become infected or die.”

ENDS

NOTES TO EDITORS

  • As of April 2, Bangladesh has 56 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and six related deaths. According to the World Health Organization, the case fatality rate in Bangladesh is 9.8 percent.
  • To protect a generation of children from the devastating effects of the COVID-19 outbreak, Save the Children has launched its Agenda for Action – a five point plan for a coordinated community, national and global action on five fronts to avert a catastrophe that could affect the lives of millions of children. 
  • Save the Children has started ramping up its existing programmes in Bangladesh. In the Rohingya refugee camps, the host communities and other districts in Bangladesh, the organisation is delivering critical supplies to health workers, restoring hygiene facilities, providing cash support to low income households and providing families with information on how to protect themselves from the virus.
  • To support Save the Children’s global COVID-19 emergency appeal, click here.

 

Spokespeople available in London and Dhaka.

 

Contact:                                                                                               Out-of-hours:

Bhanu.Bhatnagar@savethechildren.org                               Media@savethechildren.org.uk

+44 7467 096 788                                                                             +44 7831 650 409

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