Our work in Myanmar

Our work in Myanmar

WHO/Myanmar
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The World Health Organization (WHO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations system. WHO comprises member states, governing bodies and secretariat. WHO's overall objective is the attainment by all peoples of the highest possible level of health. The Organization was established on 7 April 1948 when its constitution took effect, a day which is commemorated annually as World Health Day.

The World health assembly is the highest governing body of the Organization, consisting of representatives of WHO's 192 member states. Six geographical areas have been delineated as regional organizations. The WHO South East Asia Region (SEAR) includes 11member states, of which Myanmar is one. The others are: Bangladesh, Bhutan, DPR Korea, India, Indonesia, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Timor Leste. Myanmar became a party to WHO's constitution on 1 July 1948. The WHO South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO) is located in New Delhi, India.

WHO country office Myanmar, led by a Representative, provides technical and financial assistance to, and collaborates with, the Ministry of Health and Sports. WHO provides technical support to other major health partners, too. WHO's national and international staff provide support for technical assistance, capacity building, advocacy, policy development, standards and guidelines.

Myanmar-WHO Country Cooperation Strategy 2014-2018

WHO Country Cooperation Strategy: 2014-2018, Myanmar
The Country Cooperation Strategy (CCS) is WHO’s strategic framework to guide the Organization’s work in and with a country.

The Country Cooperation Strategy (CCS) for Myanmar is a medium-term vision of the World Health Organization's efforts to support health development in Myanmar in the next four years. It is based on analysis of the current health situation in the country, Myanmar Health Vision 2030, the National Health Policy, the strategies and priorities of the National Health Plan 2011–2016 and the UN Strategic Framework 2012–2015. The work of developmental partners in health and the work of WHO in the previous CCS cycle were also considered. The strategies were developed within the framework of the Twelfth General Programme of Work and special consideration was also given in enhancing the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), principally of the health targets by 2015. Throughout the process a close consultation was maintained with the Ministry of Health. The strategic agenda outlined in the document presents the priorities and actions that WHO can most effectively carry out to support health development, guiding the work of WHO in Myanmar at all level of the Organization. The strategic agenda for WHO's work in Myanmar will centre around five priorities: (1) strengthening the health system; (2) enhancing the achievement of communicable disease control targets; (3) controlling the growth of noncommunicable disease; (4) promoting health throughout the life course; and (5) strengthening capacity for emergency risk management and surveillance systems to various health threats. The priority areas will be addressed through a coordinated programme of work that will seek to harness the potential strengths of the stakeholders. For each of the strategic priorities, a set of main focuses and strategic approaches have been formulated. The WHO Country Office will be strengthened and reorganized in teams working on these priority areas.

 

Five strategic priorities of WHO in Myanmar

Strategic priority 1:

Strengthening the health system

Strategic priority 2:

Enhancing the achievement of communicable disease control targets

Strategic priority 3:

Controlling the growth of noncommunicable disease burden

Strategic priority 4:

Promoting health throughout the life course

Strategic priority 5:

Strengthening capacity for emergency risk management and surveillance systems

Publications and information resources

"မြန်မာနိုင်ငံ၌ ကိုဗစ်-၁၉ ရောဂါလူနာအား အိမ်တွင်းလူနာအဖြစ်ပြုစုကုသခြင်းလမ်းညွှန်" လက်စွဲမှာ ကမ္ဘာ့ကျန်းမာရေးအဖွဲ့၏ ကမ္ဘာလုံးဆိုင်ရာလမ်းညွှန်ကို အခြေခံ၍...

cover_COVID19 Case Management Guideline for Home-based Care in Myanmar_11 Oct 21

This guideline is intended to help the health care providers who are providing life-saving medical treatment to COVID-19 patients in the context of home-based...

The first case of COVID 19 was detected in Myanmar on the 23rd of March 2020 in a returnee from abroad followed by a gradual rise of cases which constituted...

မြန်မာနိုင်ငံတွင် ကိုဗစ်-၁၉ ပထမလှိုင်းကို နိုင်ငံခြားမှပြန်လာသူတစ်ဦးထံမှ မတ်လ (၂၃)ရက်၊ ၂၀၂၀ ခုနှစ်တွင် စတင်တွေ့ရှိပြီး မေလ၊ ၂၀၂၀ ခုနှစ်တိုင်အောင် ရောဂါတွေ့ရှိမှု...

The Structured Operational Research and Training Initiative (SORT IT) is a global partnership-based initiative coordinated by TDR, the UNICEF/UNDP/World...

Our activities

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Emergency health assistance in Rakhine state

Emergency health assistance in Rakhine state

Overview

Following the events of 25 August 2017, WHO is working closely with the Ministry of Health and Sports (MoHS) at Union and State levels to provide emergency health assistance to affected people. MoHS mobilized health staff from other parts of the country to augment local emergency health response. Importantly, health sector meetings were organized in Sittwe on 10 October and 16 November 2017.
WHO quickly supported three anti-cholera kits for Sittwe, Buthidaung and Maungdaw Township Health Departments. First batch of Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF)-funded, WHO-supported essential medicines were handed over to Rakhine State Health Directorate on 28 September 2017, and a second batch on 2 November 2017. The CERFfunded emergency health care services of MoHS in Maungdaw and Buthidaung kept going after the events of 25 August 2017 --- with a third batch of essential medicines to be delivered by end 2017.
WHO is supporting health teams of MoHS in Maungdaw, Buthidaung, Rathedaung and Sittwe townships as well as capacity building of MoHS emergency health teams in central Rakhine state through to end 2017. WHO is also providing technical assistance to MoHS with regards to disease surveillance and response, early warning, alert and rapid response system (EWARS). WHO, together with partners, continues to support MoHS to help meet humanitarian health needs in Rakhine state.
Union Minister of Health & Sports HE Dr Myint Htwe chaired the most recent national health cluster meetings to discuss and collaborate with health partners.