Holland Bool, Author at Direct Relief Mon, 24 Nov 2025 20:11:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://i0.wp.com/www.directrelief.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/cropped-DirectRelief_Logomark_RGB.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Holland Bool, Author at Direct Relief 32 32 142789926 In Iraqi Kurdistan, Medicines Support a Displaced People https://www.directrelief.org/2025/11/in-iraqi-kurdistan-medicines-support-a-displaced-people/ Tue, 25 Nov 2025 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=90255 More than a decade after a genocidal campaign killed thousands of Yazidi people, primarily men and older women, an estimated 200,000 Yazidis are still unable to return home, living in displacement camps in the semi-autonomous area of Iraqi Kurdistan. “The Yazidis have been forgotten by the world,” said Gier Fjeld, head of international operations at […]

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More than a decade after a genocidal campaign killed thousands of Yazidi people, primarily men and older women, an estimated 200,000 Yazidis are still unable to return home, living in displacement camps in the semi-autonomous area of Iraqi Kurdistan.

“The Yazidis have been forgotten by the world,” said Gier Fjeld, head of international operations at the Medical Initiative Norway, speaking from his office in Iraqi Kurdistan in late 2024.

Public support programs for displaced Yazidis, refugees, and other vulnerable people in the region were canceled or discontinued beginning in 2023. People living in camps for safety have been told to return to their homes in hostile areas, where their safety will be at severe risk. Yazidi women, many of them victims of sexual violence, were widowed by the genocide, and now struggle to pay for food, water, and medicine for their families. Fjeld said many have been forced into prostitution to feed their children.

“When you remove all the services — food, water, safety, and medical care — you force the Yazidis out of the camps. They’ll create temporary settlements in abandoned buildings, without any access to safety,” he explained.

This young child near Duhok, diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia, received treatment through the Duhok Directorate of Health. (Courtesy photo)

The loss of public funding has caused suspended services, closed camps, and severely limited the regional healthcare system, which is responsible for more than a million refugees and internally displaced people. The Duhok Directorate of Health, a public health authority in Iraqi Kurdistan, cares for people, including Yazidis, in camps and other temporary settlements. While medical providers are available to care for patients, even going without pay for long periods in some cases, medicine shortages are a serious issue for people with cancer and other chronic diseases.

“Getting diagnosed is not a problem. The problem is the treatment. Most people are referred to private treatment,” which they can’t afford, explained an aid worker stationed in Iraqi Kurdistan, who asked to speak anonymously to preserve their safety while working in the field, during a 2024 Direct Relief interview. They have been working in the region since 2014.

“If you have a chronic disease, and you are without medication, there’s no stability. You might receive some…medication this month, but you might not for the next two months,” Fjeld said.

Partnering closely with the Duhok DOH, Direct Relief has mobilized over $144 million in cancer drugs alone to Iraqi Kurdistan since 2020. The organization has also provided partners in the region with emergency preparedness and response items, such as field medic packs, insulin and other medications for non-communicable diseases, and other requested items – totaling more than $156 million and 1,300 tons since 2016.

“Direct Relief is the largest contributor of aid to the Directorate of Health in Duhok, securing life-saving medications for thousands of patients throughout the Kurdish region of Iraq,” wrote Dr. Lazgin Jamil, a pediatric oncologist with the DOH, in an email. “As the DOH continues to suffer from lack of medication…in addition to lack of funds to purchase medicines and medical consumables, we are grateful beyond words for the incredible support from Direct Relief.”

Fjeld explained that a patient with symptoms of cancer might be referred to a public health facility for diagnosis: “They’ll have a bed, doctors, and nurses,” but without outside support, there would be “no cancer medications.”

A mother who received diabetes medication donated by Direct Relief plays with her child. (Courtesy photo)

“Because of Direct Relief’s support the cancer medicine is there and freely available,” he said. The partnership is “saving thousands of children suffering from cancer.”

Iraqi Kurdistan is largely out of the media spotlight right now, said the on-the-ground aid worker, which means that it’s often overlooked as a potential location for donor support. However, they emphasized, the dedicated public health providers, strong logistical network, and close partnerships make it an especially effective place to establish and deliver a system of longer-term medical support.

Direct Relief’s shipments of oncology supplies and other medications have also freed up room in healthcare budgets, allowing organizations working in the region to offer more services. Fjeld explained that providing medications alone might be half the monthly cost of running a camp, but “Direct Relief is giving medicines for free.”

“It’s been a very successful program, beyond what I ever imagined,” the aid worker noted. “It’s really been amazing what we’ve been able to pull off.”

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Papua New Guinea’s Rural Communities, Devastated by Disasters, Receive Medical Support https://www.directrelief.org/2024/09/papua-new-guineas-rural-communities-devastated-by-disasters-receive-medical-support/ Tue, 17 Sep 2024 23:23:04 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=82412 Natural disasters in Papua New Guinea, an island nation in Oceania, have killed and displaced thousands of people this year. These events have added new and urgent medical needs to an already overwhelmed health system coping with infectious and chronic diseases against a background of violence and instability. A catastrophic landslide in May buried an […]

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Natural disasters in Papua New Guinea, an island nation in Oceania, have killed and displaced thousands of people this year. These events have added new and urgent medical needs to an already overwhelmed health system coping with infectious and chronic diseases against a background of violence and instability.

A catastrophic landslide in May buried an entire community in the country’s central highlands, resulting in over 2,000 fatalities and affecting thousands of people. In March, a magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck in a remote northern region, killing five people and destroying more than a thousand homes across dozens of villages already inundated by widespread, severe flooding along the Sepik River.

Papua New Guinea is the most populated country in the Pacific Islands, but it is also heavily rural, complicating both health care access and emergency response efforts. Of its 10 million residents, 85% live in rural areas with extremely limited transportation infrastructure. Poverty affects 40% of the population.

Even before these disasters, the country faced a high incidence of infectious and vector-borne diseases like pneumonia, tuberculosis, malaria, typhoid, and diarrheal illnesses, many of which can be exacerbated by flooding and displacement. As in countries around the world, chronic diseases like diabetes and hypertension are a rapidly growing concern. Violent conflicts between tribes have led to repeated killings and added to instability.

Landslides, earthquakes, and flooding bring urgent health risks such as contaminated water — cholera outbreaks in the aftermath of these disasters are common — an increase in vectors like mosquitoes, immediate and long-term mental health disorders, and new opportunities for contagious diseases to spread, such as when people shelter in close quarters. Displacement and interruptions to health care can cause chronic diseases to spiral out of control, deprive people of nutritional support, and increase the risk of pregnancy and birth complications.

Direct Relief’s Response

Direct Relief has a long-standing relationship with Hope Worldwide, an international NGO working to increase health care capacity and access in Papua New Guinea, among many other projects. For Direct Relief’s emergency response team, this relationship provided a valuable opportunity to connect with the two local Public Health Authorities confronting disasters in their communities. The organization’s staff members worked with the PHAs to determine health care needs on the ground and coordinate support.

In response to these crises — and to bolster future response capabilities — Direct Relief deployed emergency medical backpacks, an emergency health kit, and a range of requested medicines and supplies to Enga’s and East Sepik’s PHAs.

Ongoing flooding in East Sepik brings a significant risk of cholera, a water-borne disease that can become deadly within hours but is easily and effectively treated with supportive care measures like hydration salts, IV fluids, and clean water. Direct Relief’s response also included a large-scale cholera treatment kit and 20,000 water filters that will be distributed to affected communities in East Sepik, with community health workers offering education and training to prevent water-borne illness.

In partnership with Hope Worldwide, Direct Relief is exploring new possibilities to bolster health capacity and make care more accessible in Papua New Guinea.

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