In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on the Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) and its impact on the Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact of the Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF #8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report.
The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
NAF Misawa Family Emergency Management BriefNAF Misawa
1) The document provides information on preparing for natural disasters like volcanoes, tsunamis, typhoons, and earthquakes that could impact the local Misawa, Japan area.
2) It outlines steps to prepare an emergency kit and family emergency plan, and describes evacuation routes and designated shelter locations both on and off base.
3) Residents are advised to stay informed by monitoring radio, TV, and social media for updates during and after a disaster, and to contact their command to check on family members.
There is a limited global supply of freshwater on Earth. Water moves through the water cycle by evaporating from bodies of water and the land, condensing in the atmosphere, and precipitating back down as rain or snow. This precipitation runs off into rivers and streams or soaks into the ground to replenish groundwater. Climate is influenced by factors like latitude, altitude, proximity to bodies of water, and ocean currents, which determine temperature and precipitation patterns in different regions of the world. The main climate types are tropical, temperate, and polar.
The document provides instructions for creating a 5-day weather forecast, including collecting current weather data, presenting key information like temperature and precipitation for each day, and discussing how to prepare for upcoming conditions. An example is given of a forecast covering the current day and next 4 days, including introductions, detailed weather statistics and forecasts for each day, and tips on dressing for changing weather. The document recommends sources like local news, maps, and television forecasts to find weather data and gives examples of online graphing and presentation tools to create the forecast.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
Typhoon Haiyan (known as Yolanda in the Philippines) caused widespread devastation, killing over 5,235 people. An aerial survey revealed almost total destruction in coastal areas of Leyte Province. Over 10 million people across nine regions were affected. As of November 23rd, over 738,000 families were displaced, with over 50,000 families inside evacuation centers. There were over 1.1 million houses damaged. Emerging health priorities included trauma care, reestablishing primary health services, immunizations and disease surveillance. Food aid was needed for 2.5 million people and essential non-food items were required for shelter and hygiene.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) and its impact on the Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact of the Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF #8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report.
The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
NAF Misawa Family Emergency Management BriefNAF Misawa
1) The document provides information on preparing for natural disasters like volcanoes, tsunamis, typhoons, and earthquakes that could impact the local Misawa, Japan area.
2) It outlines steps to prepare an emergency kit and family emergency plan, and describes evacuation routes and designated shelter locations both on and off base.
3) Residents are advised to stay informed by monitoring radio, TV, and social media for updates during and after a disaster, and to contact their command to check on family members.
There is a limited global supply of freshwater on Earth. Water moves through the water cycle by evaporating from bodies of water and the land, condensing in the atmosphere, and precipitating back down as rain or snow. This precipitation runs off into rivers and streams or soaks into the ground to replenish groundwater. Climate is influenced by factors like latitude, altitude, proximity to bodies of water, and ocean currents, which determine temperature and precipitation patterns in different regions of the world. The main climate types are tropical, temperate, and polar.
The document provides instructions for creating a 5-day weather forecast, including collecting current weather data, presenting key information like temperature and precipitation for each day, and discussing how to prepare for upcoming conditions. An example is given of a forecast covering the current day and next 4 days, including introductions, detailed weather statistics and forecasts for each day, and tips on dressing for changing weather. The document recommends sources like local news, maps, and television forecasts to find weather data and gives examples of online graphing and presentation tools to create the forecast.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
Typhoon Haiyan (known as Yolanda in the Philippines) caused widespread devastation, killing over 5,235 people. An aerial survey revealed almost total destruction in coastal areas of Leyte Province. Over 10 million people across nine regions were affected. As of November 23rd, over 738,000 families were displaced, with over 50,000 families inside evacuation centers. There were over 1.1 million houses damaged. Emerging health priorities included trauma care, reestablishing primary health services, immunizations and disease surveillance. Food aid was needed for 2.5 million people and essential non-food items were required for shelter and hygiene.
Typhoon Haiyan (known as Yolanda in the Philippines) caused widespread destruction in the Philippines in November 2013. As of November 18th, official reports stated 3,976 people were killed and 18,175 injured. Over 2 million families (around 10 million people) were affected across many provinces. Infrastructure like roads, airports, and seaports were damaged. The health sector was also severely impacted, with many health facilities destroyed. There was an urgent need for injury management, disease prevention, and support for maternal and child health. Food and clean water supplies were inadequate for the large number of displaced people, posing health and nutrition risks.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
The document provides an overview of the situation after Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) devastated parts of the Philippines. It summarizes:
1) The typhoon caused widespread destruction, particularly on Samar Island and Leyte, affecting over 11 million people. The death toll rose to over 2,300 with thousands more injured or missing.
2) Emerging needs included safe drinking water, shelter, treatment for injuries and medical conditions, food, sanitation and household supplies. Air transport was urgently needed to deliver relief goods and personnel.
3) The current situation update reported over 1,800 dead, 2,600 injured and 84 missing. Over 1.3 million families were affected
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report . The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested..
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report. The Yale-Tulane ESF #8 Program is a multi-disciplinary, multi-center, graduate-level, program designed to produce ESF-8 planners and responders with standardized skill sets that are consistent with evolving public policy, technologies, and best practices. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
Typhoon Haiyan caused widespread damage in the Philippines. As of November 9th, over 750,000 people had been evacuated and 7 deaths and 7 injuries reported. Infrastructure was severely damaged, with 13 airports and over 100 domestic flights suspended. Shortages of clean water, food, shelters and damaged roads and bridges increased risks of waterborne and infectious diseases. Health facilities lacked resources to treat expected rises in injuries, diarrhea, dengue and respiratory illnesses. The typhoon threatened further damage as it exited the Philippines.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
This document provides situational information and the response efforts regarding Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) which is expected to have a major humanitarian impact in the Philippines and surrounding areas. It outlines the storm's projected path and current strength, areas under public storm warnings, potential storm surges, and current evacuation and infrastructure status. It also summarizes public health risks including injuries, infectious diseases, and the weakened state of the Philippine medical system from a recent earthquake. Response efforts are underway by various Philippine government agencies as well as international organizations like the Philippine Red Cross to provide relief and assistance.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
Super Typhoon Haiyan is expected to make landfall in central Vietnam within the next 48 hours, affecting over 6.5 million people. The Vietnamese government and Red Cross are taking actions to prepare and respond. Evacuations are underway in coastal and low-lying areas expected to be hardest hit. International organizations are also mobilizing support for emergency response efforts. Heavy rains, flooding, and strong winds are predicted to impact central provinces already damaged by previous storms. National and local authorities are monitoring dams and reservoirs and preparing search and rescue operations.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
Typhoon Maysak brought destructive winds and heavy rains to the Federated States of Micronesia in early April, damaging homes, crops, and infrastructure. Two USAID staff assessed the damage in Chuuk and Yap States and are coordinating the US response. The US has provided over $100,000 in initial aid and more assessments are planned to determine further needs. Governments at national and state levels in FSM are also responding by distributing relief supplies and establishing relief funds.
We believe a flawed premise. Typhoon disasters, which occur annually, should be enough to make any nation susceptible to typhoons adopt and implement policies that will lead to their typhoon disaster resilience. Fact: it usually takes multiple disasters before a stricken nation will adopt policies to move towards disaster resilient. Creating turning points for typhoon disaster resilience. Integration of scientific and technical solutions with political solutions for policies on preparedness, protection, early warning, emergency response, and recovery. Presentation courtesy of Dr. Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction
The document provides an overview of Tropical Storm Ondoy (Ketsana) that hit the Philippines in September 2009, including its chronology, effects, damages, field interviews, and lessons learned. It describes how over 40 inches of rain fell in just 6 hours, overwhelming Manila and surrounding areas with the worst flooding in decades. Nearly 5 million people were affected, with estimated damages of $11 billion. Interviews found that while warnings were issued, no one expected floods of this magnitude, and evacuation efforts were hampered by the rapid onset of flooding.
The document provides an overview of severe weather events in multiple states in late April 2014, including tornadoes and flooding. As of April 29th, there were 200 injured and 35 deaths reported across affected areas. Oklahoma, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and other states experienced tornadoes and thunderstorms between April 27-30. The document outlines ongoing response efforts and contact information for various state emergency management agencies.
- Tropical Depression Gener was located 250km east of Virac, Catanduanes, packing maximum sustained winds of 55kph near its center.
- Tropical Storm Helen maintained its strength while slowly moving westward, raising typhoon signal number 2 over Cagayan, Calayan Islands, and Isabela.
- Tropical Depression Julian formed north of Luzon on August 3rd and was designated by PAGASA and JMA. It later weakened.
UN Office of Coordinatio of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha) Philippines Haiyan Re...Prworks VisMin
- Typhoon Haiyan affected 9-13 million people across 9 regions in the Philippines. 2.3 million people are concentrated in Eastern, Western, and Central Visayas regions. The number of displaced people increased to 3 million, over 70% in 6 adjacent provinces. About 375,000 people have received food assistance so far.
- The humanitarian response is 24% funded. Food security, emergency shelter, WASH, and health are the most underfunded clusters. Emergency telecommunications and camp management responses are underway to support displaced populations, but traffic issues are hampering relief efforts.
This is a report on the Hawaii WIldfires, as of 15 August 2023. The Virtual Medical Operations Briefs were initially created by faculty members and graduate students from the Yale University School of Public Health as a service-learning opportunity. Conceived during the Haiti Earthquake of 2010, it fuses the numerous status reports, maps, news, and web content into one document that can be easily read, widely distributed, and be interactive. These Special Reports are developed by graduate students from the Yale and are supervised by faculty. The reports are widely distributed and used throughout the federal interagency, international response community, and other state and private sector constituents. The reports are generated when a complex emergency, disaster or outbreak occurs which has significant health and medical implication.
A powerful earthquake struck southern Turkey and northern Syria, causing widespread damage and tens of thousands of casualties. The 7.8 magnitude quake was one of the strongest in over a century for the region. Infrastructure was heavily damaged, over 20,000 deaths were reported, and nearly 90,000 people were injured across both countries. The disaster overwhelmed local response capabilities. Humanitarian needs included emergency shelter, food, water and medical assistance.
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Semelhante a Yale-Tulane Special Report - Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) - The Philippines - 22 NOV 2013 as of 8 AM EST
Typhoon Haiyan (known as Yolanda in the Philippines) caused widespread destruction in the Philippines in November 2013. As of November 18th, official reports stated 3,976 people were killed and 18,175 injured. Over 2 million families (around 10 million people) were affected across many provinces. Infrastructure like roads, airports, and seaports were damaged. The health sector was also severely impacted, with many health facilities destroyed. There was an urgent need for injury management, disease prevention, and support for maternal and child health. Food and clean water supplies were inadequate for the large number of displaced people, posing health and nutrition risks.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
The document provides an overview of the situation after Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) devastated parts of the Philippines. It summarizes:
1) The typhoon caused widespread destruction, particularly on Samar Island and Leyte, affecting over 11 million people. The death toll rose to over 2,300 with thousands more injured or missing.
2) Emerging needs included safe drinking water, shelter, treatment for injuries and medical conditions, food, sanitation and household supplies. Air transport was urgently needed to deliver relief goods and personnel.
3) The current situation update reported over 1,800 dead, 2,600 injured and 84 missing. Over 1.3 million families were affected
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report . The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested..
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced a special report. The Yale-Tulane ESF #8 Program is a multi-disciplinary, multi-center, graduate-level, program designed to produce ESF-8 planners and responders with standardized skill sets that are consistent with evolving public policy, technologies, and best practices. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
Typhoon Haiyan caused widespread damage in the Philippines. As of November 9th, over 750,000 people had been evacuated and 7 deaths and 7 injuries reported. Infrastructure was severely damaged, with 13 airports and over 100 domestic flights suspended. Shortages of clean water, food, shelters and damaged roads and bridges increased risks of waterborne and infectious diseases. Health facilities lacked resources to treat expected rises in injuries, diarrhea, dengue and respiratory illnesses. The typhoon threatened further damage as it exited the Philippines.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed, responding to the crisis, if you need for us to research as specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities.
It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
This document provides situational information and the response efforts regarding Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) which is expected to have a major humanitarian impact in the Philippines and surrounding areas. It outlines the storm's projected path and current strength, areas under public storm warnings, potential storm surges, and current evacuation and infrastructure status. It also summarizes public health risks including injuries, infectious diseases, and the weakened state of the Philippine medical system from a recent earthquake. Response efforts are underway by various Philippine government agencies as well as international organizations like the Philippine Red Cross to provide relief and assistance.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
Super Typhoon Haiyan is expected to make landfall in central Vietnam within the next 48 hours, affecting over 6.5 million people. The Vietnamese government and Red Cross are taking actions to prepare and respond. Evacuations are underway in coastal and low-lying areas expected to be hardest hit. International organizations are also mobilizing support for emergency response efforts. Heavy rains, flooding, and strong winds are predicted to impact central provinces already damaged by previous storms. National and local authorities are monitoring dams and reservoirs and preparing search and rescue operations.
In light of Typhoon Haiyan and its impact on Philippines, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The group that produced this summary and analysis of the current situation are graduate students from Yale and Tulane Universities. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested. Finally, for those of you who are deployed and responding to the crisis - if you need us to research a specific item/area for you let us know and we will do our best.
Typhoon Maysak brought destructive winds and heavy rains to the Federated States of Micronesia in early April, damaging homes, crops, and infrastructure. Two USAID staff assessed the damage in Chuuk and Yap States and are coordinating the US response. The US has provided over $100,000 in initial aid and more assessments are planned to determine further needs. Governments at national and state levels in FSM are also responding by distributing relief supplies and establishing relief funds.
We believe a flawed premise. Typhoon disasters, which occur annually, should be enough to make any nation susceptible to typhoons adopt and implement policies that will lead to their typhoon disaster resilience. Fact: it usually takes multiple disasters before a stricken nation will adopt policies to move towards disaster resilient. Creating turning points for typhoon disaster resilience. Integration of scientific and technical solutions with political solutions for policies on preparedness, protection, early warning, emergency response, and recovery. Presentation courtesy of Dr. Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction
The document provides an overview of Tropical Storm Ondoy (Ketsana) that hit the Philippines in September 2009, including its chronology, effects, damages, field interviews, and lessons learned. It describes how over 40 inches of rain fell in just 6 hours, overwhelming Manila and surrounding areas with the worst flooding in decades. Nearly 5 million people were affected, with estimated damages of $11 billion. Interviews found that while warnings were issued, no one expected floods of this magnitude, and evacuation efforts were hampered by the rapid onset of flooding.
The document provides an overview of severe weather events in multiple states in late April 2014, including tornadoes and flooding. As of April 29th, there were 200 injured and 35 deaths reported across affected areas. Oklahoma, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and other states experienced tornadoes and thunderstorms between April 27-30. The document outlines ongoing response efforts and contact information for various state emergency management agencies.
- Tropical Depression Gener was located 250km east of Virac, Catanduanes, packing maximum sustained winds of 55kph near its center.
- Tropical Storm Helen maintained its strength while slowly moving westward, raising typhoon signal number 2 over Cagayan, Calayan Islands, and Isabela.
- Tropical Depression Julian formed north of Luzon on August 3rd and was designated by PAGASA and JMA. It later weakened.
UN Office of Coordinatio of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha) Philippines Haiyan Re...Prworks VisMin
- Typhoon Haiyan affected 9-13 million people across 9 regions in the Philippines. 2.3 million people are concentrated in Eastern, Western, and Central Visayas regions. The number of displaced people increased to 3 million, over 70% in 6 adjacent provinces. About 375,000 people have received food assistance so far.
- The humanitarian response is 24% funded. Food security, emergency shelter, WASH, and health are the most underfunded clusters. Emergency telecommunications and camp management responses are underway to support displaced populations, but traffic issues are hampering relief efforts.
Semelhante a Yale-Tulane Special Report - Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) - The Philippines - 22 NOV 2013 as of 8 AM EST (20)
This is a report on the Hawaii WIldfires, as of 15 August 2023. The Virtual Medical Operations Briefs were initially created by faculty members and graduate students from the Yale University School of Public Health as a service-learning opportunity. Conceived during the Haiti Earthquake of 2010, it fuses the numerous status reports, maps, news, and web content into one document that can be easily read, widely distributed, and be interactive. These Special Reports are developed by graduate students from the Yale and are supervised by faculty. The reports are widely distributed and used throughout the federal interagency, international response community, and other state and private sector constituents. The reports are generated when a complex emergency, disaster or outbreak occurs which has significant health and medical implication.
A powerful earthquake struck southern Turkey and northern Syria, causing widespread damage and tens of thousands of casualties. The 7.8 magnitude quake was one of the strongest in over a century for the region. Infrastructure was heavily damaged, over 20,000 deaths were reported, and nearly 90,000 people were injured across both countries. The disaster overwhelmed local response capabilities. Humanitarian needs included emergency shelter, food, water and medical assistance.
This report specifically looks at the impact COVID-19 has had on nursing homes and the nursing home industry. Contributors are students, faculty, and alumni located in a variety of geographic locations from Yale, Tulane, and Sacred Heart Universities. It provides information gathered from situation reports, government and non-governmental organization, media reporting, and a variety of information sources, verifies and synchronizes the information and provide real-time information products to federal, state, local, nongovernmental and international response organizations.
Contributors are students, faculty, and alumni located in a variety of geographic locations from Yale, Tulane, and Sacred Heart Universities. It provides information gathered from situation reports, government and non-governmental organization, media reporting, and a variety of information sources, verifies and synchronizes the information and provide real-time information products to federal, state, local, nongovernmental and international response organizations.
At the end of December 2019, Chinese authorities reported an outbreak of acute respiratory syndrome in Wuhan, China caused by a novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). On January 30, 2020 the WHO declared it a Public Health Emergency of International Concern and on March 11 a pandemic. There are now over 2.9 million confirmed cases globally with over 200,000 deaths across 213 countries/areas. The US has the most cases while Europe is currently the epidemic center. Risk is considered moderate for the general population but very high for elderly and healthcare systems.
In light of the blizzard that is about to impact the northeastern part of the US, the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. The report was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
In light of the first imported case Ebola to the United States the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Network has produced this special report which focuses on operations and preparedness here at home..
The report was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
This document provides an overview of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa as of early October 2014. It summarizes the situation in each affected country, including Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. It reports case and death counts by country according to the WHO. It also describes challenges faced in responding to the outbreak such as community resistance, lack of healthcare resources, and the economic impacts. International organizations are providing support to response efforts.
In light of the rise in #Ebola Epidemic in West Africa Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. Past alumni, graduate students from Tulane and Yale, and members of Team Rubicon have assisted in putting this report together.
The report was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.For those of you who are deploying and would like us to focus in on a specific topic or issue let us know and we’ll do our best go get the materials or information you need. If any of you would like to volunteer to help put the brief together let me know and we’ll add you to our team.
In light of the rise in Ebola Epidemic in West Africa Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report.. Past alumni, graduate students from Tulane and Yale, and members of Team Rubicon have assisted in putting this report together.
The report was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested..
In light of the of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report.
Since most of our student are not back yet from summer break I reached out to past alumni and members of Team Rubicon to assist in putting this report together.
The report was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
Any students, past alumni, or volunteers who would like to work on future slides let me know. Assistance is always welcome.
In light of the of the floods and landslides that are ongoing in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report.
- A severe weather outbreak is forecast for parts of the lower Mississippi Valley and Tennessee Valley through tonight, with numerous tornadoes expected, some of which could be intense. Large hail and damaging winds are also likely.
- As of 1800 EDT on April 28th, there have been 130 injuries and 15 deaths reported across multiple states from the tornadoes and severe weather. State and federal agencies are responding.
- Specific impacts are reported for Arkansas, Kansas, Mississippi, and Oklahoma, including destroyed homes and businesses, power outages, flooding, and shelters in operation. Additional tornadoes and severe weather are possible through the evening.
In light of the rise in MERS CoV cases in the Middle East the Yale-Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Program has produced this special report. It was compiled entirely from open source materials. Please feel free to forward the report to anyone who might be interested.
This document provides an overview of the Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa as of April 18, 2014. It summarizes the situation in Guinea and Liberia, where confirmed Ebola cases have been reported. In Guinea, there have been a total of 197 clinical cases and 122 deaths reported. In Liberia, there have been 27 clinical cases and 13 deaths reported. The response has included contact tracing, case isolation and management, training for health workers, and social mobilization efforts. Challenges include limited health resources, infection control issues, and the need to improve community awareness as the outbreak continues.
Mais de Yale -Tulane ESF-8 Planning and Response Network (16)
AI 101: An Introduction to the Basics and Impact of Artificial IntelligenceIndexBug
Imagine a world where machines not only perform tasks but also learn, adapt, and make decisions. This is the promise of Artificial Intelligence (AI), a technology that's not just enhancing our lives but revolutionizing entire industries.
5th LF Energy Power Grid Model Meet-up SlidesDanBrown980551
5th Power Grid Model Meet-up
It is with great pleasure that we extend to you an invitation to the 5th Power Grid Model Meet-up, scheduled for 6th June 2024. This event will adopt a hybrid format, allowing participants to join us either through an online Mircosoft Teams session or in person at TU/e located at Den Dolech 2, Eindhoven, Netherlands. The meet-up will be hosted by Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), a research university specializing in engineering science & technology.
Power Grid Model
The global energy transition is placing new and unprecedented demands on Distribution System Operators (DSOs). Alongside upgrades to grid capacity, processes such as digitization, capacity optimization, and congestion management are becoming vital for delivering reliable services.
Power Grid Model is an open source project from Linux Foundation Energy and provides a calculation engine that is increasingly essential for DSOs. It offers a standards-based foundation enabling real-time power systems analysis, simulations of electrical power grids, and sophisticated what-if analysis. In addition, it enables in-depth studies and analysis of the electrical power grid’s behavior and performance. This comprehensive model incorporates essential factors such as power generation capacity, electrical losses, voltage levels, power flows, and system stability.
Power Grid Model is currently being applied in a wide variety of use cases, including grid planning, expansion, reliability, and congestion studies. It can also help in analyzing the impact of renewable energy integration, assessing the effects of disturbances or faults, and developing strategies for grid control and optimization.
What to expect
For the upcoming meetup we are organizing, we have an exciting lineup of activities planned:
-Insightful presentations covering two practical applications of the Power Grid Model.
-An update on the latest advancements in Power Grid -Model technology during the first and second quarters of 2024.
-An interactive brainstorming session to discuss and propose new feature requests.
-An opportunity to connect with fellow Power Grid Model enthusiasts and users.
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Main news related to the CCS TSI 2023 (2023/1695)Jakub Marek
An English 🇬🇧 translation of a presentation to the speech I gave about the main changes brought by CCS TSI 2023 at the biggest Czech conference on Communications and signalling systems on Railways, which was held in Clarion Hotel Olomouc from 7th to 9th November 2023 (konferenceszt.cz). Attended by around 500 participants and 200 on-line followers.
The original Czech 🇨🇿 version of the presentation can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/hlavni-novinky-souvisejici-s-ccs-tsi-2023-2023-1695/269688092 .
The videorecording (in Czech) from the presentation is available here: https://youtu.be/WzjJWm4IyPk?si=SImb06tuXGb30BEH .
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
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How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
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HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Best 20 SEO Techniques To Improve Website Visibility In SERPPixlogix Infotech
Boost your website's visibility with proven SEO techniques! Our latest blog dives into essential strategies to enhance your online presence, increase traffic, and rank higher on search engines. From keyword optimization to quality content creation, learn how to make your site stand out in the crowded digital landscape. Discover actionable tips and expert insights to elevate your SEO game.
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Project Management Semester Long Project - Acuityjpupo2018
Acuity is an innovative learning app designed to transform the way you engage with knowledge. Powered by AI technology, Acuity takes complex topics and distills them into concise, interactive summaries that are easy to read & understand. Whether you're exploring the depths of quantum mechanics or seeking insight into historical events, Acuity provides the key information you need without the burden of lengthy texts.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
Yale-Tulane Special Report - Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) - The Philippines - 22 NOV 2013 as of 8 AM EST
1. YALE/TULANE ESF-8 PLANNING AND RESPONSE PROGRAM SPECIAL REPORT
TYPHOON HAIYAN (YOLANDA PH) – THE PHILIPPINES
BACKGROUND
WEATHER OUTLOOK
CURRENT SITUATION
HEALTH
FOOD
NUTRITION
WASH
EMERGENCY SHELTER
LOGISTICS
PROTECTION
US RESPONSE
CLUSTER MEETINGS
COORDINATION HUBS
CLUSTER LEADS
INJURED
23,404
DEAD
5,209
22 NOV 2013
(As of 8:00 AM EST)
LINKS
PHILIPPINES
NATIONAL DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND MANAGEMENT COUNCIL
PHILIPPINE ATMOSPHERIC, GEOPHYSICAL AND ASTRONOMICAL
SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL WELFARE AND DEVELOPMENT
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
DOH PHILIPPINE HEALTH ATLAS
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION & COMMUNICATIONS
DSWD DISASTER MITIGATION AND RESPONSE SITUATION MAP
OFFICIAL GAZETTE
PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD
PHILIPPINE INFORMATION AGENCY
WEATHER PHILIPPINES
THE MANILA TIMES
GMA
PROJECT NOAH
INTERNATIONAL/REGIONAL
RELIEFWEB
OCHA HUB
Humanitarian Response - The Philippines
EUROPEAN
HUMANITARIAN AID AND CIVIL PROTECTION
CEDIM
UNITED STATES
THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE
OFDA
NOAA
PACOM
JOINT TYPHOON WARNING CENTER
NASA
VOA
US EMBASSY – THE PHILIPPINES
HEALTH INFORMATION
CDC
DISASTER INFORMATION MANAGEMENT CENTER
PORTALS AND RESOURCES
ASEAN COORDINATING CENTER FOR HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE ON
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
GDDAC
PREVENTION WEB – PHILIPPINES
THOMAS REUTERS FOUNDATION
UNDERGROUND WEATHER
GOOGLE CRISIS RELIEF MAP
HUMANITY ROAD
PACIFIC DISASTER CENTER
2. BACKGROUND
Typhoon Haiyan (known in the Philippines as Typhoon Yolanda) is the
second-deadliest Philippine typhoon on record, killing at least 5,209
people
The thirtieth named storm of the 2013 Pacific typhoon season, Haiyan
originated from an area of low pressure several hundred kilometers eastsoutheast of Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia on 2
November. Tracking generally westward, environmental conditions
favored tropical cyclogenesis and the system developed into a tropical
depression the following day.
After becoming a tropical storm and attaining the name Haiyan at
0000 UTC on 4 November, the system began a period of rapid
intensification that brought it to typhoon intensity by 1800 UTC on
November 5.
AFFECTED AREA: Regions VIII (Eastern Visayas), VI (Western Visayas)
and VII (Central Visayas) are hardest hit, according to current information.
Regions IV-A (CALABARZON), IV-B (MIMAROPA), V (Bicol), X (Northern
Mindanao), XI (Davao) and XIII (Caraga) were also affected. Tacloban
City, Leyte province, with a population of over 200,000 people, has been
devastated, with most houses destroyed.
An aerial survey revealed almost total destruction in the coastal areas
of Leyte province.
AFFECTED POPULATION: 2,145,359 families (9,996,065 persons) in nine
regions—over 10 percent of the country’s population—are affected
By 6 November, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) assessed the
system as a Category 5-equivalent super typhoon on the Saffir-Simpson
hurricane wind scale; the storm passed over the island of Kayangel in
Palau shortly after attaining this strength.
it continued to intensify; at 1200 UTC on 7 November the Japan
Meteorological Agency (JMA) upgraded the storm's maximum ten-minute
sustained winds to 235 km/h (145 mph), the highest in relation to the
cyclone. At 1800 UTC, the JTWC estimated the system's one-minute
sustained winds to 315 km/h (195 mph), unofficially making Haiyan the
fourth most intense tropical cyclone ever observed.
On the morning of 8 November, category 5 Typhoon Haiyan (locally
known as Yolanda) made a direct hit on the Philippines, a densely
populated country of 92 million people, devastating areas in 36 provinces.
The eye of the cyclone made its first landfall in the Philippines at Guiuan,
Eastern Samar, without any change in intensity.
Young residents push a cart as they collect water in an area destroyed in the
aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan on November 18, 2013 in Tacloban, Philippines.
Kevin Frayer / Getty Images
SOURCES:
PHILIPPINES: TYPHOON ACTION PLAN – NOVEMBER 2013
WIKIPEDIA - TYPHOON HAIYAN
4. WEATHER OUTLOOK
GALE WARNING NO. 11
For: Strong to gale force winds associated with the surge of Northeast Monsoon.
Issued at 5:00 p.m. today, 22 November 2013
Strong to gale force winds is expected to affect the seaboards of Northern Luzon and
the eastern seaboard of Central and Southern Luzon and Visayas.
Synopsis:
At 4:00 pm today, a Low Pressure Area (LPA) was estimated based on all available data at 168 km East of
Surigao City (9.6°N, 127.0°E). Tail-end of a cold front affecting Northern Luzon.
Forecast:
Eastern Visayas and Mindanao will experience cloudy skies with moderate to occasionally heavy
rainshowers and thunderstorms which may trigger flashfloods and landslides. Bicol Region, Palawan and
the rest of Visayas will have cloudy skies with light to moderate rainshowers and thunderstorms. Cagayan
Valley, Cordillera Administrative Region, the provinces of Aurora and Quezon will be cloudy with light
rains. Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers or
thunderstorms.
Moderate to strong winds blowing from the northeast will prevail over Luzon and Visayas and the coastal
waters along these areas will be moderate to rough. Elsewhere, winds will be light to moderate coming
from the northeast with slight to moderate seas.
(in Filipino)
ACCUWEATHER - WEATHER - TODAY & TOMORROW
PAGASA 24-HOUR PUBLIC WEATHER FORECAST
PAGASA
ACCUWEATHER WEATHER - 5 DAYS
5. CURRENT SITUATION
As of 22 NOV 2013 – 8 PM PhT
CASUALTIES: 5,209 individuals were reported dead, 23,404 injured and
1,611 missing.
AFFECTED POPULATION:
A total 2,156,295 families (10,004,125 persons) were affected in 10,724
barangays in 44 provinces, 575 municipalities and 57 cities of Regions IVA, IV-B, V, VI, VII, VIII, X, XI and CARAGA.
918,593 families (4,300,486 persons) were displaced.
Inside 1,511 evacuation centers:
• 77,737 families 361,167 persons inside evacuation centers
• 840,856 families/ 3,939,319 persons outside evacuation centers
DAMAGES (Regions IV-B, V, VI, and CARAGA):
• DAMAGED HOUSES: 1,086,327 houses damaged (536,680 totally /
549,647 partially)
• The total cost of damages is $512,036,740 USD.
‒ INFRASTRUCTURE: The total cost of damages increased to
$272,484,212 USD
‒ AGRICULTURE: $ 239,436,888 USD
AIRPORTS:
• To date, operations in Tacloban Airport is still limited
• The Philippine Ports Authority has taken over the Port of
Tacloban.
PAGASA.DOST.GOV.PH
OCHA CARITAS TELECOMS SANS FRONTIERES
SEAPORTS: All seaports are operational.
• The Matnog, Sorsogon Port to Allen, Northern Samar now has 4 additional
barges. The barges were deployed for a total of 16, thereby doubling the
normal services.
• The Bulan Port in Sorsogon to Allen, Northern Samar will be allocated for
mercy missions.
FOOD: 2.5 million people are in need of food assistance, but nutrition
supplies are inadequate and logistical constrains hamper delivery of food.
OCHA mentions 2 million individual rations were distributed in Leyte
Province.
POWER OUTAGE:
• The DOE, through NEA, has been assisting the 29 affected electric
cooperatives in Regions IV-B, V, VI, VII, and VIII in restoring power to the
374 affected municipalities. Power has been restored in 122 (33%)
municipalities; power has been fully restored in the provinces of Negros
Oriental, Siquijor, Romblon, Oriental Mindoro, and Occidental Mindoro.
The NEA targets to restore power to all municipalities on or before 24
December 2013.
• Based on NGCP’s latest inspection, 566 transmission towers and poles are
either leaning or toppled and 7 substations are affected .
WATER: Municipality of Barbaza, Antique and some municipalities/cities in
Capiz and Iloilo, still do not have water supplies. Water supply system in
Busuanga town proper is functional. Coron, however, is implementing a
rationing system.
NETWORK OUTAGE: Globe Mobile Services have also been restored in the
towns of Borongan, Eastern Samar, Isabel and Palo in Leyete;
Lavezares, Rosario, San Jose and Lope de Vega in Northern Samar;
Hinunangen, Limasaw and Sogod in Southern Leyte; San Sebastion and
Pagsangan in Western Samar; Culasi and Laua-an in Antique;
Dumarao, Capiz, and Daanbantayan, Cebu.
7. CHINA
• A Chinese hospital ship set sail for the typhoon-ravaged Philippines
on 21 NOV 2013.
•
The Peace Ark, a 300-bed floating navy medical facility, with a
medical staff of 100 doctors and nurses on board, and can handle
eight surgeries simultaneously.
•
It is expected to take three or four days to reach the Philippines.
The Peace Ark will initially be stationed in Samar province, but how
long it remains in the Philippines will depend on the situation
SOURCE: AFP
A sailor stands in a ward on the Philippine-bound
hospital ship Peace Ark in Zhoushan in China's Zhejiang
province on November 21, 2013 (AFP, Peter Parks)
Naval personnel wave to Philippine-bound hospital
ship Peace Ark in Zhoushan, in China's Zhejiang
province on November 21, 2013 (AFP, Peter Parks)
8. EMERGING NEEDS
MEDICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH
• 41% of surveyed health facilities (115 out of a total of
2,495) are non-functional
• Only 20% of children fully immunized against measles
• 233,697 pregnant and 155,798 lactating women need
specialized reproductive health services
• Lack of some basic and essential health care services
such as routine surgery
• Patchy disease surveillance
TEMPORARY SHELTER, EVACUATION CENTERS, AND CAMPS
• 1.1 million houses damaged
• 4.4 million people internally displaced people (IDPs), 91% of
which are residing outside evacuation centers
• Overcrowding in evacuation centers (Eastern Visayas)
• No electricity in evacuation centers (Tacloban City)
• No proper drainage and waste management facilities in
evacuation centers
• Inadequate information on shelter needs in Palawan province
FOOD AND WATER
• 2.5 million people in need of food assistance
• Hundreds of thousands of hectares of crops destroyed
• Farmers need for rice seed is time-bound
• Markets have not reopened causing people to rely on
food assistance (Tacloban city)
• No access to safe water in some areas
• Municipality of Barbazza, Antique, and some
municipalities/cities in Caprize
SECURITY
• Looting in places with food supplies
• Limited number of Government social workers
• Disaggregated data on the number of children at
regional, municipal, and barangay levels is unavailable
• Absence of referral pathways for protection services
• Local child protection councils non-functioning
LOGISTICAL BARRIERS
• Debris impeding access to remote and interior areas
• Fallen trees
• Lack of overall debris management plan
• Power outages
MISCELANEOUS
• 90% of public schools and daycare centers in affected
areas are damaged
• Unavailable data on needs of IDPs (Tacloban city, Roxas
city, & southern Samar)
• Some provinces and municipalities in Regions IV-B, V, VI, VII,
& VIII( MapAction/OCHA Power Distruption Map)
• Power outages in Tacloban city affecting emergency
telecommunications
• Operations at Tacloban airport are still limited
• Limited availability of landing slots
• Limited trucks for relief efforts (Tacloban)
• Incessant rain
•
•
•
•
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Situation Report 13
Lutheran World Relief: Situation Report No.13
NDRRMC UPDATE: SitRep No. 31
OXFAM: mergency Food Security & Vulnerable Livelihoods:
Tacloban City and Leyte Province
• ICRC: helping identify the dead
9. EMERGING PRIORITIES
IMMEDIATE WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE
• Installation of water bladders, water points and mobile water
treatment units
• Generators to power small water systems
• Rehabilitation of water supply systems
• Chlorination of water sources
• Water quality surveillance
• Distribution of water and hygiene kits
• Waste management
• Temporary/semi-permanent latrines (East Samar)
• Repair of home-based toilets (East Samar)
ESSENTIAL HEALTH SERVICES
• Trauma care for the injured and the prevention of tetanus
• Re-establishment of essential primary and secondary
care, including medical, surgical, and obstetrics
• Provision of medicines and medical supplies
• Mental health and psycho-social support
‒ Children and first responders
‒ More professionals needed
• Immunization for measles and polio
• Establishment of an early warning system for early detection and
response to an outbreak
• Infection control in healthcare units including safe blood
transfusions, medical waste management, sufficient supplies of
clean water, and sanitation
• Repair and rehabilitation of damaged health facilities
• Referral system from primary to specialized care
• Management of acute malnutrition
• Continuity of treatment for chronic conditions
• Management of dead bodies
NUTRITION SERVICES FOR CHILDREN AND MOTHERS
• Provision of nutrition supplies for therapeutic feeding
• Micronutrient supplements and equipment
• Rapid nutrition assessments and screening
• Community-based therapeutic feeding centers for girls & boys with
severe acute malnutrition.
FOOD AID FOR 2.5 MILLION PEOPLE
• General food distribution of food baskets containing rice and
ready-to-eat high-energy biscuits.
• Establishment of community kitchens
SHELTER & URGENT HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
• Tarpaulins, corrugated iron sheets, nails and other building
tools and materials for makeshift shelters
• Immediate shelter needs are currently a priority over longterm shelter needs
• Non-food items such as family kits, sleeping kits, cooking
utensils, mosquito nets, and sanitization and hygiene kits
• Care and maintenance of existing evacuation centers and
transitional sites
LIVELIHOOD
• Can be coordinated with the need for removal and safe
disposal of debris
• Provide food or cash for WASH related constructions and
protection to WASH lumber
• 1 million farmers and fisherman need assistance to restart
livelihoods
• Rice Farmers need seeds to plant before mid-December
• Tricycle and pedicab drivers need repairs to or replacement of
damaged vehicles
EDUCATION
• Learning tents and tarpaulins are needed for schools that are
damaged
• Temporary learning spaces needed
• Learning materials needed
• Tracking of school children, day care workers, and teachers
•
•
•
•
•
•
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Action Plan - November 2013
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Situation Report 13
Lutheran World Relief: Situation Report No.13
Oxfam: Rough Rapid Assessment, Province of Eastern Samar
OXFAM: mergency Food Security & Vulnerable Livelihoods: Tacloban City and Leyte Province
HEALTH CLUSTER BULLETIN # 1
10. CURRENT ASSESSMENT – DISEASE AND INJURIES
Medical consults conducted in selected evacuation centers (Astrodome,
Dulag, EVRMC, Phil. Science High School, San Jose, Tanauan) revealed the
following:
• From November 9 to 16, 2013 is 1112 cases were seen.
• The top five cases identified were: punctured/lacerated wound,
influenza like illness, acute gastroenteritis, upper respiratory tract
infection, and fever. Punctured/lacerated wounds (186) are highest
among adults,
• Influenza-like Illness (92), acute gastroenteritis (78), upper
respiratory tract infection (69) and fever (24) are highest among
children.
Tanauan Evacuation Center appears to be the evacuation center with the highest
number of cases.
DISEASES/ INJURIES:
•
Two leptospirosis deaths have been verified: A 22-year-old male from Tacloban
City and a 58-year-old male from Palo, Leyte
•
DOH confirms that there have been a number of tetanus cases. Those verified
were all males whose ages ranged from 19 to 60 years. One came from Tolosa,
Leyte and the rest from Tacloban. All of them are alive.
•
Top health conditions reported are acute respiratory infections, injuries and
wounds, fever, diarrhea, hypertension, asthma and insomnia, as well as chronic
conditions.
•
The risk of outbreaks of diarrheal diseases and measles is substantial given the
lack of safe water and sanitation, displacement and overcrowding, and suboptimal vaccination coverage.
PNA
HEARS Current Situation Nov 22, 2013
HEARS Current Situation Nov 21, 2013
HEARS Current Situation NOV 20, 2013
HEARS Current Situation Nov 19, 2013
HEARS Current Situation Nov 17, 2013
HEARS Current Situation Nov 16, 2013
For the period November 13-21, 2013, Eastern Visayas Medical Center reported
the following services: 1,524 ER consultations, 1,795 OPD consultations and
1,352 total in- patient census and 350 operations. The top 5 leading causes of
consultation are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Trauma/typhoon related injuries
Respiratory tract infection
Acute gastro enteritis
Hypertension
Skin disease.
A total of 100 patient given prophylaxis for leptospirosis and 18 tetanus toxoid
in November 21.
There is a total of 62 DOH National teams, 53 foreign teams and 23 local health
teams that have been deployed in the areas affected by Typhoon Yolanda.
11. DISEASE BRIEF- LEPTOSPIROSIS
DESCRIPTION
Leptospirosis is a disease caused by a type of bacteria. It is spread
by contacting the urine of an infected animal (usually rats). People
get sick by touching, eating, or drinking water or soil that has been
infected by animal urine. Outbreaks often happen with floodwaters
after a hurricane.
RISK FACTORS
TREATMENT
Leptospirosis is treated with antibiotics, usually doxycycline or
penicillin for a course of one week.
CURRENT SITUTATION
Two leptospirosis deaths have been verified: A 22-year-old male
from Tacloban City and a 58-year-old male from Palo, Leyte
Drinking, eating, or touching contaminated water or soil.
SYMPTOMS
People usually start getting sick with a fever, chills, and vomiting 2
days to 4 weeks after the bacteria enters their body. Without
treatment, people can be sick for a few days or sometimes more
than 3 weeks. Some people recover after a few days but will later
become sick again with life-threatening symptoms.
Some of the common symptoms include:
•
High fever
•
Headache
•
Chills
•
Muscle aches
•
Vomiting
•
Jaundice (yellow skin and eyes)
•
Red eyes
•
Abdominal Pain
•
Diarrhea
•
Rash
RECOMMENDATIONS
• Aid workers should avoid consuming any unfiltered water.
• Keep floodwater and soil off skin, especially, from the
eyes, nose, mouth, or open wounds.
• Anybody experiencing a combination of the listed symptoms
should seek medical attention as soon as possible.
CDC
The New York Times - 14 Nov
12. DISEASE BRIEF-MEASLES
DESCRIPTION
TREATMENT
• A respiratory disease caused by the measles virus
• Highly contagious – 90% of people without immunity (those
never vaccinated) sharing a living space with an infected person
will develop the disease
• Spread via respiration by coming in contact with fluids from an
infected person’s nose and mouth either directly or through
droplets in the air
• Complications are common and usually more severe in adults
• Most people with uncomplicated measles will recover without
specific treatment
• Rest and supportive care (e.g. fluids)
• Hospitalization for those with severe complications
•
examples include pneumonia, ear infection, encephalitis
(inflammation of the brain), corneal ulcerations, and miscarriage or
premature delivery in pregnant women
RISK FACTORS
• Not getting vaccinated
• Travel to or contact with someone who has travelled to
developing countries where measles is common (endemic),
vaccinations are limited, and/or malnutrition is common
• Sharing the same living space with an infected person
CURRENT SITUTATION
• Much of the Philippines is not immunized against measles
• Medical and public health authorities have been monitoring for
potential outbreaks, but communications is still an issue
• There are reports of possible measles in Guiuan and Borongan
RECOMMENDATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
a generalized (covers the entire body), flat-to-slightly raised red
rash (see photo to the right)
appears several days after the fever starts
•
not share close spaces or intimate contact with infected persons
wear masks and gloves if contact with infected persons is
unavoidable
wash hands thoroughly with antimicrobial soap and hot water
Confirm you have had the measles vaccine prior to travelling to
any endemic area
•
•
SYMPTOMS
Symptoms develop in unvaccinated people 9 to 12 days after
coming in contact with an infected person.
•
Fever (up to 40 C or 104 F)
•
The 3 C’s of Measles: Cough, Coryza (term that describes
inflammation in the upper respiratory tract [nasal cavities] that
commonly occurs with a ‘cold’), and Conjunctivitis (red eyes)
•
Runny nose
•
Loss of appetite
•
Rash -- classic symptom of measles
Individuals who have not been vaccinated should:
vaccination is the primary and most effective method of prevention
most people in developed countries have been vaccinated
Infected individuals should be placed in isolation
(Photos of the classical
measles rash)
CDC - Measles
Doctors Without Borders
13. CURRENT ASSESSMENT – HEALTH
SURVEILLANCE:
The disease surveillance system in the affected areas has been
disrupted by the typhoon as many of the reporting sites have ben dertoyed/
Systems for disease monitoring have been activated, but are hampered by
damaged communications infrastructure, introducing latency in reportage
Surveillance in Post Extreme Emergencies and Disasters (SPEED), an emergency
disease surveillance system, has been activated. SPEED is an early warning
disease surveillance system for post-disaster situations launched by the GPH
Department of Health and U.N. World Health Organization in 2010.
The aim of the system is to determine early and potential disease outbreaks
and monitor disease trends.
MATERNAL HEALTH: An estimated 389,500 pregnant and lactating women
need specialized services for prenatal, postnatal, child health, health
promotion and family planning. Daily, an estimated 865 births take place in the
affected communities. About 129 of these will have potentially life-threatening
complications
MENTAL HEALTH: Medical Team and MHPSS team at Villamor Airbase to
conduct triaging and psychosocial services. A total of 1,680 consultations and
755 psychosocial services were done for the period Nov. 15-18.
.
AS OF 21 NOV 2013:
DOH TEAMS - 59 TEAMS DEPLOYED
OTHER VOLUNTEERS - 13 TEAMS
FOREIGN VOLUNTEER - 53 FOREIGN TEAMS
WHO
HEARS Current Situation Nov 22, 2013
HEARS Current Situation Nov 21, 2013
14. DAMAGED HEALTH FACILITIES
As of November 22, 2013
OPERATION STATUS
AFFECTED HEALTH FACILITIES
Region 6
CAPIZ
ILOILO
GUIMARAS
BOHOL
CEBU
NEGROS ORIENTAL
Region 8
Region 4B
LEYTE
SAMAR (WESTERN
SAMAR)
SOUTHERN LEYTE
ORIENTAL MINDORO
PALAWAN
# OF
DAMAGED HF
8
19
4
6
7
6
2
16
4
1
2
3
5
27
1
1
1
1
8
26
17
1
2
1
3
2
5
FUNCTIONAL
NOT FUNCTIONAL
LGU Hospitals
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
Barangay Health Station
LGU Hospitals
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
Barangay Health Station
LGU Hospitals
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
Barangay Health Station
City Health Office
Retained Hospital
LGU Hospitals
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
Barangay Health Station
Barangay Health Station
Barangay Health Station
LGU Hospitals
City / District Health Center
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
Barangay Health Station
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
Barangay Health Station
City Health Office
Retained Hospital
Private Hospital
LGU Hospitals
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
AKLAN
ANTIQUE
Region 7
EXTENT OF DAMAGE
8
19
2
6
6
6
2
15
1
1
2
3
3
23
1
0
1
1
4
5
17
0
2
1
2
1
4
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
9
1
2
1
9
3
204
Barangay Health Station
LGU Hospitals
Retained Hospital
LGU Hospitals
Rural Health Unit / Health Center
TOTAL
0
0
2
0
1
0
0
1
3
0
0
0
2
4
0
1
0
0
4
21
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
PARTIALLY
DAMAGED
5
11
4
6
6
5
2
16
2
0
1
3
5
23
0
0
1
1
6
15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
COMPLETELY
DAMAGED
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
11
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
8
1
0
0
0.00
0
2
1
9
3
159
1
0
0
0
0
45
0
2
0
0
0
114
1
0
0
0
0
18
200,000.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
24,249,900.00
http://taskforceyolanda.doh.gov.ph/damage/reportdhflist.php
ESTIMATED TOTAL
COST OF DAMAGE
120,000.00
949,900.00
800,000.00
720,000.00
4,360,000.00
1,380,000.00
2,040,000.00
2,180,000.00
840,000.00
0.00
480,000.00
7,400,000.00
2,780,000.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
15. HEALTH AND MEDICAL – ORMOC
HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE
• 1 LGU Hospital (Ormoc District Hosptial-roof destroyed) not functional
• 1 Private Hospital (OSPA Farmers Medical Center) not functional
• 2 Private Hospitals (Gatchalian Hospital; and Maternity and Children’s
Hospital) are partially functional
• 1 Private Hospital (Ormoc Doctors Hospital) is fully functional
• 5 RHUs (Curva, Linao, Cogon, Ipil, Valencia) remains functional
• 1 RHU San Pablo District Hospital (Uncertain functionality)
• 16 BHS in Ormoc City, and 34 in greater Ormoc area were damaged and
reported not functional
In Ormoc, supplies of drugs are running low. The water system is
operating again, supported by a generator since the electric grid
was completely destroyed
FOREIGN MEDICAL MISSION: 5
LOCAL MEDICAL MISSION: 6
FOREIGN
• MERCY MALAYSIA at Ormoc District Hospital. They have set up
emergency services to provide out-patient treatment. Top priority is to
fix the roof of Ormoc District Hospital which was completely destroyed
by the storm (team=8).
• SWISS SDC/SHA: At City Government Center. SHA team is working
closely with SDC team. (team=10)
• MSF-HOLLAND: at Ormoc City, setting up field unit and will send mobile
clinic units if necessary
• JOHANNITER GERNAMY At City Government Center. They are working
with their local partner ”Balay Mindanaw Foundation“ (team-12)
• IFRC-CANADIA AND NORWEGIAN at Ormoc District Hospital Vicinity. Its
operating theater, maternity wards and inpatient services began on
Thursday in Ormoc. This Emergency Response Unit is a joint deployment
of the canadian, norwegian and Hong Kong Red Cross societies.
LOCAL
• THE PHILIPPINE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS : near Ormoc District Hospital
in cooperation with the Department of Health (DOH) (team=28)
PH Health Atlas (Monitoring) as of Nov 21
PH Health Atlas (Medical Mission) as of Nov 21
16. HEALTH - NEEDS
•
Injury management is urgently required. The Eastern Visayas
Regional Medical Center is the only operational hospital in Tacloban
City.
•
Health infrastructures are severely damaged in the worst affected
areas and medical supplies are low.
•Basic and essential health care services must be expanded, including for
routine surgeries (e.g. Caesarians).
•
According to preliminary reports, 25 health facilities in Region VIII
are serving over 200 000 affected people.
•Common illnesses reported include diarrhea, acute respiratory
infections and injuries. Deaths from tetanus and suspected cases of
leptospirosis have been reported in Tacloban.
•
According to NDRRMC 12,501people have been injured, with
numbers expected to rise as more areas become accessible.
•
An oral polio vaccination campaign is necessary but is hampered by
lack of cold chain capacity.
•
Emergency surveillance systems needs to be established. The
population is at increased risk of tetanus as well as outbreaks of
acute respiratory infections, measles, leptospirosis and typhoid
fever
•
There is no delivery of routine health services in affected areas, as
well as lack of medicine, surgical and general medical supplies.
•
Most drugstores have been looted and medicines, including family
planning supplies, are urgently required, particularly in Tacloban
City.
•
Health service delivery points, including for emergency obstetric
and neonatal care, are compromised by the sustained damage.
HEALTH
NEEDS:
•The Government has prioritized the restoration of primary and hospital
health services, including the structural safety of hospitals, appropriate
medical waste management and infection control.
•Solar refrigerators and solar lamps are required for rural health units in
areas still without power.
•As of 19 November, 942 (mainly hospitals) of 2,495 health facilities in
the affected area have been assessed; 104 are not functioning (11 per
cent). However, village-level health facilities are also largely not
functioning, creating a serious gap in health care.
•In the hardest hit areas, one third of the children suffer from
malnutrition while only 20 per cent have been fully immunized against
measles, leaving them particularly vulnerable to the deadly disease.
• An estimated 389,500 pregnant and lactating women need specialized
services for pre-natal, post-natal and child health care, as well as health
promotion and family planning services. Daily, an estimated 865 births
take place in the affected communities. About 129 of these will have
potentially life-threatening complications.
OCHA SITREP 10-21 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10-20 NOV
2013
CHA SITREP 10– 19 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10– 18 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10– 17 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10– 16 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 9– 15 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 8 – 14 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 6 - 12 NOV 2013
PHILIPPINES: TYPHOON ACTION PLAN – NOVEMBER 2013
17. HEALTH - RESPONSE
HEALTH
•
86 medical teams are working in affected areas, including 42 foreign
medical teams and 44 Department of Health medical teams. Altogether,
1,500 medical personnel have been deployed.
• The Government and partners have provided essential medicines and
tents to operational health facilities, but more supplies and equipment
are needed.
•
A mass measles, vitamin A and polio vaccination campaign starts in
Tacloban on 25 November. Measles vaccination and vitamin A dosing
took place in seven evacuations centres in Tacloban.
• Staff is coordinating three medical teams in Tacloban and one in
Medellin, which are delivering outpatient emergency care, pediatric and
primary health care; 16 medical teams are en-route to affected areas.
•
10,000 dignity and hygiene kits for pregnant and breastfeeding women
are being delivered to Tacloban City and Eastern Samar.
• A sub-national health cluster has been established in Cebu.
•
Health facility damage is being mapped.
•
Doctors and nurses in Tacloban City have mobilized to conduct
reproductive health and medical missions.
•
SPEED, an emergency disease surveillance system, has been activated.
•
A campaign for mass vaccination against measles and polio is being
organized and will begin this week in Tacloban.
•
62 Government, private and foreign medical teams have been deployed
across affected municipalities in Regions VI, VII and VIII.
•
In Roxas City, a cold chain has been established.
OCHA SITREP 10-21 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10-20 NOV
2013
CHA SITREP 10– 19 NOV 2013
• Emergency supplies were shipped to Tacloban including four emergency
kits with medicines and supplies to cover basic health services for
120,000 people for one month, supplies to perform 400 surgical
interventions and four diarrheal disease kits with medicines and supplies
to treat 3,000 cases of acute diarrhea.
• Reproductive health kits 6A and 6B (clinical delivery assistance) were
sent to Guiuan, Eastern Samar to treat patients with obstetric
complications. Additionally, a generator set, one refrigerator to store
medicines, one delivery bed, midwifery kits and hygiene kits were sent.
OCHA SITREP 9– 15 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10– 17 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10– 16 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 8 – 14 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 6 - 12 NOV 2013
PHILIPPINES: TYPHOON ACTION PLAN – NOVEMBER 2013
18. HEALTH – GAPS & CONSTRAINTS
HEALTH
GAPS & CONSTRAINTS:
•
The transport of patients to referral hospitals is still an issue due to the
lack of ambulances and fuel. This is improving as roads are cleared.
•
Health facility damage is impeding safe health care in provincial
hospitals (e.g. Tacloban).
•
Plans to fill gaps by the eventual departure of foreign medical teams
are required.
•
Available vaccines and supplies for planned campaigns are estimated to
be sufficient only for Eastern Visayas region. Volunteers are needed to
administer vaccines in these campaigns.
•
The lack of electricity is undermining cold chain operations.
•
The disease surveillance system is currently patchy due to a disrupted
communications network. Reporting and enquiries can be directed to
haiyanops@wpro.who.int.
•
The following materials are needed to provide health services:
Interagency Emergency Health Kits, Reproductive Health kits,
Diarrhoeal Disease Kits and WASH supplies. Cholera kits should be kept
on stand-by.
OCHA SITREP 10-21 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10-20 NOV
2013
CHA SITREP 10– 19 NOV 2013
•
Basic and essential health care services, including routine surgical
capacity (including for Caesarians), must expand. There is an immediate
need for reproductive health kits across hardest hit areas.
•
Transportation of medical supplies to the affected areas is currently one
of the biggest constraints.
The lack of access to safe water, overcrowding and displacement pose
serious risk of outbreaks of communicable diseases. Disease surveillance
needs to be strengthened.
•
•
Establishing temporary points for delivery of health services is critical as
infrastructure is damaged and people do not have access to medical
care.
•
Medical teams require fuel, water purification and safe accommodation.
•
The breakdown in communication facilities in many affected areas has
hampered reporting and planning for reproductive health activities.
•
Temporary health facilities, generators, medication, surgical supplies,
cold storage and WASH facilities are urgently required.
•
There is a high risk of acute respiratory infections, diarrhea,
leptospirosis, measles, cholera and typhoid.
•
People are traumatized and lack psycho-social support.
OCHA SITREP 10– 17 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 10– 16 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 9– 15 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 8 – 14 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 6 - 12 NOV 2013
PHILIPPINES: TYPHOON ACTION PLAN – NOVEMBER 2013
22. RED CROSS AND RED CRESCENT ACTION
OPERATIONS
• IFRC has deployed a Disaster Law expert to provide advice as needed to PRC and
other partners to support humanitarian diplomacy.
• As part of the cash working group, the IFRC recovery coordinator for Asia Pacific is
deploying to Manila to move the cash coordination agenda forward.
• The National Society has set up 20 welfare desks to assist with restoring family links
and provide psychosocial support.
LOGISTICS
•More than 85 metric tonnes (93 tons) of relief materials are being flown from IFRC’s
logistic hub in Kuala Lumpur to devastated areas.
• The IFRC global logistics service has reserved 25,000 jerry cans and 100,000
tarpaulins with framework agreement suppliers. An additional 24,000 tarpaulins are
booked for sea freight.
• An IT/Telecoms ERU has deployed to Cebu and is setting up access in the
operations warehouse.
• A UK Red Cross RAF-C-130 aircraft has arrived in Cebu, which is capable of flying
into smaller airfields, dealing with shorter runways, and dealing with unpredictable
conditions. This should allow support to reach otherwise inaccessible areas.
SHELTER CLUSTER
• The shelter cluster has full time capacity dedicated to cluster coordination in
Manila, Roxas, Tacloban and Bohol. The inter-agency shelter coordination team will
be increased from 8 to 16 staff members by mid-next week.
• The shelter cluster will be creating sub operational hubs in Cebu and Roxas. Other
hubs under consideration include Ormac (being considered as satellite under
Tacloban) in Leyte; Borogan and Guiuan (potentially 2 hubs or 1 hub with 1 satellite)
in Eastern Samar; and Iloilo (being considered as a satellite under Roxas) in Capiz.
• The first shelter cluster meeting was held in Cebu on November 15th.
• Detailed assessments will be taking place soon, including a WASH cluster rapid
assessment team member, to do a joint assessment and ensure provision of shelter
with water and sanitation components.
IFRC Operation Update No1, Nov. 17
IMPERATIVE CONDITIONS FOR CONTINUED RED CROSS
PROGRESS
• Adequate support (financial) from partners
• Weather conditions do not suspend activities for long periods
• Disaster-affected areas remain accessible
• Continued cooperation of the authorities
• Security issues do not hinder field operations
POINTS OF CONTACT
Gwendolyn Pang, Secretary General PRC, Tel: +63 2 525 5654
Soaade Messoudi, ICRC Manila, Tel: +63 918 907 2125
Birte Hald, IFRC Phillipines, Tel: +63 2 336 8622
Richard Gordon, Chairman PRC, Tel: +63 917 899 7898
Patrick Fuller, IFRC Manila, Tel: +60 12 230 8451
23. FOOD
FOOD
NEEDS: About 2.5 million people are in need of food assistance. It
is critical to get rice seed and fertilizer to approximately 250,000
farmers by mid-December. More than 1 million farmers and fishers
need livelihoods restored immediately, as Guiuan and Mercedes
municipalities have seen near total crop destruction and fishing gear
and boats severely damaged, particularly in Carles.
RESPONSE:
•
Partners in the Philippines: ACF, ACTED, ADRA, CARE, CARITAS,
CONCERN, CRS, DRC, GOAL, HelpAge, ICRC, IFRC, IMC, IRC,
Islamic Relief, LWF, Mercy Corps, NRC, OXFAM, Samaritan’s
Purse, Solidarites International, UNICEF and WVI.
•
On November 20th, WFP met with partners to map out who
can immediately distribute what and where.
•
All interested implementing partners for agriculture should
contact FAO (mathias.mollet@fao.org) for rice/seed
intervention, livestock and fisheries intervention work.
•
As of November 20th, DSWD and WFP have distributed nearly
2.7 million individual rations, ICRC and Philippines Red Cross
have reached 79,800 people with food and other cluster
partners have reached 135,585 people.
•
25+ municipalities have been reached with food assistance,
with the government reporting reaching all affected areas to
date.
•
11,300 households will receive agricultural inputs, such as
fertilizer, vegetable and rice seeds, and tools for the planting
season.
HELP NEEDED. An estimated 9.8 million people, including children, are at
risk of hunger and disease. Humanitarian assistance is critical. Photo by
Franz Lopez/Rappler
Food Cluster Coordinator:
Jeffrey Marzilli jeffrey.marzilli@wfp.org
WFP Co-Leads
Beatrice Tapawan, 0917-539-9944
beatrice.tapawan@wfp.org
Dipayan Bhattacharyya (0917-594-2450
dipayan.bhattacharyya@wfp.org)
FOOD SECURITY CLUSTER
SOCIAL MEDIA:
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
CLUSTER UPDATE - Nov 15
AGENCY LOCATIONS MAP - Nov 15
HUMANITARIAN NEEDS MAP - Nov 17
CLUSTER MEETING MINUTES - Nov 19
HUMANITY ROAD -Nov 19
OCHA SITREP- Nov 20
OCHA SNAPSHOT – Nov 20
24. FOOD
FOOD
GAPS & CONSTRAINTS:
• A major gap in food assistance exists for affected people in
northern Cebu.
• More food is needed to continue distributions and increase the
rations.
• No funds have been committed to restore fisheries-based
livelihoods.
• Food Cluster is currently 49% funded out of a total US$76.2 million
request.
• Logistical constraints hamper the delivery of food assistance, but
rapid expansion is occurring; coordination hub now in Cebu.
• Isolated island communities, notably North and South Gigante,
have yet to receive assistance.
• Resources are overstretched as the cluster is also responding to
the Bohol and Zamboanga emergencies.
• Security is a concern as people have stormed warehouses and
food distribution sites.
• Delivered food supply is insufficient for many populations.
• There is a limited timeframe (by mid-December) in which to assist
farmers in planting crops to ensure a viable harvest and food
supply.
• Over 40% of 130,000 hectares of affected crops (mostly rice and
coconut) have been destroyed. Farmers’ critical need for rice seed
is time-bound to the cropping calendar.
•
CLUSTER MEETING MINUTES - Nov 19
HUMANITY ROAD -Nov 19
CLUSTER UPDATE - Nov 15
OCHA SITREP- Nov 20
AGENCY LOCATIONS MAP - Nov 15
OCHA SNAPSHOT – Nov 20
HUMANITARIAN NEEDS MAP - Nov 17
PRIORITIES:
• General food distribution, with food baskets containing rice
and ready-to-eat high-energy biscuits.
• Emergency food-for-work and cash-for-work to help kickstart early recovery activities and rebuild livelihoods.
• Cluster leads are assembling information on locations of all
involved organizations for better coordination.
• Cluster presence map update by end of week
High Energy Biscuits are important in the early days of an emergency
because they are light, easy to transport and require no cooking. At a time
when energy levels are low, they help keep people's spirits up (WFP)
FOOD SECURITY CLUSTER
SOCIAL MEDIA:
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
25. NUTRITION
NEEDS:
PRIORITIES (URGENT):
• Delay in access to affected populations increases likelihood of
deterioration of health and nutrition of affected populations with
potential outbreaks of diseases.
• Rapid nutrition assessments and screening for detection, referral,
and follow-up of girls, boys and women supported by local women's
groups, religious leaders, and child protections councils;
• 4.9 million children (1.5 million of them under age 5) are at risk of
global acute malnutrition and require nutrition support.
• Establish and support Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) in
emergency community peer counseling activities with women's
groups and other trained community counselors;
• Priority interventions needed include infant and young child feeding
(IYCF), Infant formula monitoring, micronutrient supplementation,
management of acute malnutrition, and health and nutrition
education.
• Disruption to maternal care and child feeding practices and damage
to WASH and health facilities place children and women at a high
risk of malnutrition, especially in high poverty areas.
• Pre-disaster data shows that the affected regions have high rates of
malnutrition (5 percent to 9 percent global acute malnutrition
(wasting), 21 percent to 26 percent underweight and 38 percent to
42 percent stunting).
• Establish community-based therapeutic feeding centers for girls and
boys with severe acute malnutrition integrated in to local health
systems;
• Provision of nutrition supplies for therapeutic feeding,
micronutrient supplements and equipment;
• Capacity-building on management of acute malnutrition and
nutrition in emergencies targeting local health staff;
UNOCHA REPORT - NOV 19
OCHA SITUATION REPORT 14 – NOV 20
Coordination and technical support to the Nutrition Cluster;
•
EMERGENCY APPEAL OPERATION UPDATE - NOV 17
•
Conduct standardized nutrition surveys for updated age- and
gender-disaggregated nutritional status data.
CLUSTER LEAD: Henry Mdebwe, Nutrition Officer, Cluster Chair
UNICEF 0917-565-4062 02-901-0150 hmdebwe@unicef.org
hmdebwe@gmail.com
26. NUTRITION
RESPONSE:
GAPS AND CONSTRAINTS:
•
Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) counselors have mobilized in
Eastern Samar, Leyte, Iloilo, Capiz, Cebu and Bohol.
• A lack of partners experienced in IYCF to support local
agencies. Immediate action is needed to harmonize messages
on IYCF.
•
Mass vitamin A supplementation begins this week.
• Vitamin A supplies are inadequate.
•
In Ormoc City, over 4,000 women received nutrition services. An
estimated 2,000 pregnant and lactating mothers received iron with
folic acid tabs, and 2,100 post-partum women received vitamin A
supplementation.
• Nutrition assessments have been delayed due to difficulties
in accessing sites and evacuation centers.
• Monitoring milk formula donations is difficult
•
•
Emergency supplies were procured for community-based
management of acute malnutrition.
Nutrition training and deployment of nutrition counselors continue
in Eastern Samar, Leyte, Iloilo, Capiz, Cebu and Bohol provinces.
ASSESSMENTS & CONCLUSIONS:
• ACF prepared to implement a nutrition survey (SMART) to assess
malnutrition and mortality; DOH conducting rapid assessments in
Leyte province; Save the Children is conducting rapid assessments in
Western Visayas.
• No visible signs of malnutrition to date, but expected to increase
(diarrhea).
• Facilities for transportation and accommodation are
damaged; food and water supplies are limited. Deployed
teams need to be fully self-sufficient.
• Of the 7 million USD asked for in action plan, 7.2% of funds
have been raised.
CLUSTER LEAD: Henry Mdebwe, Nutrition Officer, Cluster Chair
UNICEF 0917-565-4062 02-901-0150 hmdebwe@unicef.org
hmdebwe@gmail.com
• No signs of infant formula distributions in Western Visayas.
UNOCHA Report - Nov 19
OCHA Situation Report 13 - Nov 19
Philippines Typhoon Action Plan - Nov 2013
Emergency Appeal Operation Update - Nov 17
Unicef meeting notes: Nov 21 2013
27. WASH
WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE
WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE
GAPS & CONSTRAINTS:
•
NEEDS:
• The potable water supply remains a concern in many areas, including
municipalities in Eastern Samar and most municipalities of Leyte, Eastern
Visayas region.
• 3 of the 5 water pumps that serve Guiuan municipality in Eastern Samar
Province are not functioning.
• Sanitation and availability of latrines is a concern in all affected areas.
• Water quality requires regular monitoring due to damaged pipelines and
unsafe water sources. Chlorination of water sources and water kits is urgently
needed.
•
•
•
Evacuation centers remain underserved, and supplies still cannot reach
all target areas.
Debris management continues to hamper distribution operations.
Limited power and fuel undermine efforts to operate small water
systems.
Water trucking capacity is limited
RESPONSE:
•
Partners have restored the water supply in Basey, Marabut and Catbalogan
City (Western Samar).
•
Repairs to distribution pipes, construction of a sludge treatment pit,
deployment of 25 portalets and broadcast of hygiene messages via mobile
trucks is currently occurring in Tacloban City.
•
In Roxas City, partners installed a WTU with a capacity of 5,000 liters per
day, serving about 333 people.
•
In Iloilo, 2,000 water and hygiene kits were distributed.
•
On 19 November, hygiene kits and water kits were distributed in Cebu.
•
The water supply has been partially restored in most areas of Western and
Eastern Visayas regions
•
In Palawan province, the water supply system in Busuanga town is operating
•
A water rationing system is being implemented in Coron
Children bathe and wash their clothes after running water was restored in Tacloban.
• Cluster partners are encouraged to send assessment data, information
and updates on their activities in order to support Who Does What
Where (3Ws) mapping to philippines@humanitarianresponse.info
• WASH cluster meetings will be held every day at 16:00 until December 31,
2013 in Tacloban City. Contact person is Silvia Ramos at 0906-516-0271
UNICEF SITREP 3 – 18 NOV 2013
OCHA SITREP 14 – 20 NOV 2013
CLUSTER COORDINATOR
Rory Villaluna UNICEF washccph@gmail.com
Phone: 0917-859-2578 or 02-901-0101
28. LOGISTICS
LOGISTICS
PRIORITIES
• Debris removal, access to cutoff communities.
• Improve air traffic/flight schedule management.
• Flight planning is generally working.
Reprogramming/reprioritization of air slots is occurring due to
ad hoc management of flight plans. Bumped off flights are not
being prioritized for the following day.
• The focus of UNHAS passenger services will be to move people
between Roxas, Cebu, Ormor, Guiuan and Tacloban.
• Establish user requirements of UNHAS transport to define the
number and capacity of air assets.
NEEDS
• Organizations have a strong need for flights to Ormac three times a
week due to the congestion of commercial ferry services.
• Eliminate ad hoc air and sea shipments. Identify incoming and
outgoing cargo; what and when each agency is expecting their
items and when and where it needs to be shipped.
GAPS
• There is no OCHA civil military representation in Cebu. This is
required.
• Intermittent power in five regions: IV-B, V, VI, VII and VIII.
• Access to safe water remains a major challenge in island towns of
Guiuan municipality (Eastern Samar province) and Bantayan Island
(Cebu province).
• Fuel shortages continue to pose a challenge.
• Tacloban airport is still experiencing light congestion.
CONSTRAINTS
• Limited availability of landing slots and flight traffic at Tacloban
airport remain a constraint.
• Communications (mobiles, internet) is limited, particularly in
remote areas- threatening the establishment of information
management systems for the response.
• Transportation of supplies for evacuation centers remains a
challenge due to air and road traffic.
Emergency situations requiring airlift should be communicated
directly to UNHAS for appropriate action. For information on
contact details, please email: unhas.philippines@wfp.org
Assessment missions can be requested, the schedule may be open
to change to accommodate these needs. Specific requests can be
made to unhas.philippines@wfp.org
OCHA Sitrep No. 14 Nov. 20
Logistics Cluster Tacloban Update Nov. 20
Logistics Cluster Sitrep Nov. 20
OCHA Sitrep No. 11 Nov. 17
UNHAS User Group Meeting Notes Nov. 18
Logistics Cluster Meeting Minutes Nov. 17
29. LOGISTICS
LOGISTICS
IMPROVED COMMUNICATIONS
• Internet (through VSAT), electrical support, security
communications and help desk services will be provided at the
humanitarian hub in Roxas City.
• ETC in Tacloban continues to provide internet, basic radio
communications and IT help desk services to the humanitarian
community.
• An emergency .lu team has completed installation of a VSAT
terminal in Ormoc City providing voice and data connectivity
services to the humanitarian community.
• A VHF radio network has been extended in Tacloban City to
provide wider coverage.
RESPONSE
• The first inter-agency shipment of relief goods by sea arrived in
Tacloban City.
• Fuel Relief Fund is providing free fuel to NGOs in Tacloban.
• Three commercial airlines are operating in/out of Tacloban
Airport.
• Free land near Palo municipality with the capacity for 25
mobile storage units has been provided by the provincial
government for common storage for the humanitarian
community.
30. LOGISTICS
LOGISTICS
NOTES FOR USERS
UNITED NATIONS HUMANITARIAN AIR SERVICE (UNHAS)
NOTE: The passenger service will be free of charge to the users until
further notice.
Booking address for requests: unhas.philippines@wfp.org ----Jared.komwono@unhas.org and ismail.osman@wfp.org should be
copied on all emails.
• Be prepared to inform UNHAS of their required destinations and
estimated number of passengers per week/destination.
• All requests must include the passengers name, date of travel,
passport details, etc.
• The priority is to establish user requirements in order to define the
number and capacity of air assets.
•
The schedule will be defined by the needs of the
participating organizations.
• Care will be taken to balance the routes with those of commercial
operators.
Organizations intending to use the service should appoint one or two
flight focal points, preferably including the country director.
Communicate your details as soon as possible to
unhas.philippines@wfp.org.
For UNHAS standard operating procedures go to: http://logcluster.org/
Logistics Cluster Tacloban Update Nov. 20
DOCUMENTS OF USE
INFRASTRUCTURE CAPACITY REPORTS
Logistics Snapshot Tacloban Port, Leyte Island
Logistics Snapshot: Ormoc Port, Leyte
Logistics Snapshot: Guiuan Port, Samar Island
Logistics Cluster Snapshot: lloilo Commercial Port
PROTOCOL GUIDANCE DOCUMENTS
Customs Guidance
Relief Item Tracking Application Guidance
REVISION Request Form: USAID Facilitated
Humanitarian Cargo Transport by Military Assets
MAPS
Ormoc CIty Map
Tacloban City Map
Guiuan City Map
Cebu City Map
Roxas City Map
Logistics Cluster Meeting Notice
Frequency: Mondays and Thursdays at 19:00
(until further notice)
Location: The Office of Civil Defence (OCD), Tacloban
32. LOGISTICS
LOGISTICS
OPERATIONAL FUEL STATIONS IN SAMAR AND LEYTE PROVINCES
Petron service stations open and able to supply fuel in Samar and Leyte
SAMAR PROVICE FUELING STATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Allen Cor San Francisco St., Catbalogan, Samar
Del Rosario St., Catbalogan, Samar
Maharlika Highway, Brgy. Capoocan, Calbayog City
Poblacion 3, Maydolong, Samar
Brgy. Nator, Taft, Eastern Samar
Songco, Borongan, Eastern Samar
Borongan, Eastern Samar
Brgy. Buray, Paranas, Jiabong, Western Samar
Salvacion, Lavezares, Northern Samar
National Road Dolores, Eastern Samar
National Road, Mondragon, Northern Samar
National Highway, Kabulihan, Catbalogan, Samar
Bobon, Northern Samar
National Highway, San Jorge, Samar
National Highway, Villareal, Samar
National Highway, Old Manunca, Sta. Rita, Samar
National Highway, Gandara, Samar
National Highway, Dolores, Eastern Samar
GMA News
LEYTE PROVINCES FUELING STATIONS
• Real, Tacloban City, Leyte
• Poblacion, Silago, Southern Leyte
• Real/Osmena, Ormoc City, Leyte
• Himatagon Saint Bernard, Southern Leyte
• Magsaysay Blvd., Baybay City, Leyte
• National Highway, Brgy. Lunang, Hilongos, Leyte
• Palo, Tacloban, Leyte
• Brgy. Libertad, Ormoc City, Leyte
• Maharlika Highway, Campetik, Palo, Leyte
• National Highway, Mahaplag, Southern Leyte
• Marasbaras, Tacloban City, Leyte
• Central San Francisco, Southern Leyte
• National Highway, Poblacion, Hindang, Leyte • Brgy. Candadam, Baybay City, Leyte
• San Jose, Sogod, Southern Leyte
• Pob. Hinunangan, Southern Leyte
• National Highway, Maasin, Southern Leyte DISTRIBUTOR NOTES
Petron is currently serving its retail network through its
• Mantahan, Maasin, Southern Leyte
Tacloban, Ormoc, and Pasacao depots. According to
• Jose Rizal Street, Bato City, Leyte
Petron, a temporary station was set up to augment the
• Sta. Sofia Padre Burgos, Southern Leyte
operational Petron stations in Tacloban.
• L. Regis St., Sogod, Southern Leyte
• Eight mobile dispensing pumps were deployed to
• Alquino, Hilongos, Leyte
Tacloban and nearby areas in lieu of the damaged
• National Highway, Poblacion Gaas Ba, Leyte
service stations.
• San Juan, Southern Leyte
• Malitbog, Southern Leyte
• National Highway, Tunga, Leyte
• Bontoc, Southern Leyte
• National Highway, Pasay, Maasin City, Leyte
• Hilongos, Leyte
• Matalom, Leyte
33. LOGISTICS CLUSTER CONTACTS
LOGISTICS
MANILA
John Myraunet (Logistics Cluster Coordinator)
Chiara Argenti (IM Officer)
Oliver Bartolo (UPS Customs Procedures Advisor)
Email: john.myraunet@wfp.org
Email: chiara.argenti@wfp.org
Mobile: +63 926 618 9007
Mobile: +63 9276613901
Mobile: +63 9158481559
CEBU
Henrik Hansen (Logistics Officer)
Tanveer Siddiqui (IM Officer)
Sean Price (Consignment Tracking Officer)
Email: henrik.hansen@wfp.org
Email: tanveer.siddiqui@wfp.org
Email: sean.price@wfp.org
Mobile: =63 09053269398
TACLOBAN
Irving Prado (Logistics Officer)
Esther Russell (IM Officer)
Andrew Jackson (Consignment Tracking Officer)
Email: irving.prado@wfp.org
Email: esther.russell@wfp.org
Email: andrew.jackson@wfp.org
Mobile: +63 9278328557
Mobile: +63 9151438193
Mobile: +63 9278328557
MANILA
Jared Komwanu (Chief Air Officer)
Ismail Osman (Air Officer)
Email: jared.komwanu@wfp.org
Email: imail.osman@wfp.org
CEBU
Tanveer Siddiqui (Information Management Officer)
Sean Price (Consignment Tracking Officer)
Email: tanveer.siddiqui@wfp.org
Email: sean.price@wfp.org
For general Logistic Cluster inquiries please email: Philippines.Logs@logcluster.org
34. CHILD PROTECTION & GENDER BASED VIOLENCE
PROTECTION
NEEDS:
RESPONSE:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
URGENT: Identification and profiling of IDPs moving out of affected areas
is needed. Many are leaving through airports and seaports with minimal
(if any) controls. This increases the risk of exposure to human trafficking.
UNICEF’s Humanitarian Action for Children requests US$61.5 million to
respond to the needs of children and women affected by Typhoon Haiyan,
an increase of its original requirements. 89% currently remains unfunded.
Approximately 3.2 million women of reproductive age and 4.6 million
affected children need psychosocial support and protection against
violence, trafficking, and exploitation.
Many have lost their documents of identification, that need to be replaced.
Many women and children in isolated areas have not been reached by
humanitarian assistance. These areas still required needs assessments.
Minority communities (Bagacay hosts Monobo; Batole hosts bajays) have
specific needs that need to be addressed.
VULNERABILITIES:
•
•
•
Power remains cut off in parts of Regions IV-B, V, VI, VII, and VIII. Lack of
electricity/lighting increases protection risk among women and children
both in evacuation centers and house-based.
Most internally displaced women and children living in overcrowded
conditions. Sharing small spaces and a lack of privacy has to a rise in
tensions.
Women and children have taken to begging to meet basic needs, which
exposes them to protection risks.
OCHA SitRep#14 20Nov
Protection Cluster Assessment 20Nov
IASC Sub-Working Group on Gender 18Nov
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Partners have established a Migration Outflow Desk at the
Tacloban Airport to register displaced people and identify
protection concerns, including human trafficking. Over 200
people have been registered.
Similar Migration Outflow Desks are planned in additional sea and
airports.
A women and children’s desk has been established in Tacloban
City’s main evacuation centers.
Partners provided 1,000 recreation kits and 1,000 Early Child
Development kits in Tacloban City.
UNICEF has supplies for between 50-100 Child Friendly Spaces
coming in 8 days (1,000 recreation kits and 1,000 Early Child
Development Kits)
Additional UNICEF staff are being deployed to specifically address
child protection issues.
DSDWD and DOH are conducting psychosocial services.
Protection Cluster will invite experts to attend the Protection
Cluster meeting and provide psychosocial support.
Child Protection Working Group;
Reproductive Health Working Group
Sarah Norton Staal
Cluster Co-Lead
snortonstaal@unicef.org; snstaal@gmail.com;
Sexual and Gender-Based Violence Working Group;
Reproductive Health Working Group
Florence Tayzon, Assistant Representative,
Working Group Chair
UNFPA 0917-859-3520 02-901-0304 tayzon@unfpa.org
35. CHILD PROTECTION & GENDER BASED VIOLENCE
PROTECTION
GAPS & CONSTRAINTS:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Stronger mechanisms are needed to prevent trafficking, particularly at ports.
Information on missing persons remains largely unavailable.
More female police officers are needed (especially in Region VIII).
Training of security personnel on human rights and protection is required.
Overcrowded evacuation centers need to be de-congested.
Child- and women-friendly spaces are needed in evacuation centers.
PROGRAMMING PRIORITIES:
• Priorities for food and non-food items must be determined through
consulting women and youth about their individual needs. Special measures
for deliver must be taken.
• Target women in the distribution of non-food items, especially house-repair
kits for female-headed households.
• Shelter programs must prioritize safe gender-specific spaces. And provision
of childcare services.
• Gender segregated latrines and bathing facilities must be constructed.
CRITICAL RESOURCES:
Tip Sheet: Addressing GBV in Health Assessments and Initial Program Design
Tip Sheet: Addressing GBV in Shelter Assessments and Initial Program Design
Tip Sheet: Addressing GBV in WASH Assessments and Initial Program Design
Minimum Standards for Child Protection in Humanitarian Action Handbook
Guidelines for Child-Friendly Spaces in Emergencies
Key Messages for Caregivers in a Sudden Onset
Actions in case of Missing or Separated Children
Child Protection Working Group;
Reproductive Health Working Group
Sarah Norton Staal
Cluster Co-Lead
snortonstaal@unicef.org; snstaal@gmail.com;
Sexual and Gender-Based Violence Working Group;
Reproductive Health Working Group
Florence Tayzon, Assistant Representative,
Working Group Chair
UNFPA 0917-859-3520 02-901-0304 tayzon@unfpa.org
Women and children in a
crowded evacuation center.
Image from World Vision.
OCHA SitRep#14 20Nov
Protection Cluster Assessment 20Nov
IASC Sub-Working Group on Gender 18Nov
37. EMERGENCY SHELTER
GAP & CONSTRAINTS
• Camp Coordination and Camp Management Cluster funding is at 14% of
the needed $6 million.
NEEDS:
• Emergency Shelter Cluster is at 36% funding of the needed $46 million.
• Water, food, mosquito nets, blankets and hygiene kits are
(Latest numbers here).
immediate priority needs in displacement sites.
• Insufficient supplies to support the migration of people out of evacuation
• Partner agencies with capacity in displacement tracking
centers and into makeshift shelters next to their homes
• URGENT NEEDS: Tarps, tents, shelter-related non-food items
• Insufficient tarps/emergency shelter materials in Capiz, Aklan and Antique
(NFIs), corrugated iron sheets, nails, building tools and materials
• Most evacuation centers in Roxas City are overcrowded schools.
• The displaced in Ormoc City are living in open structures and under poor
RESPONSE:
conditions
• 4.4 million people are displaced (including 1 million children), of
which 387.450 people (83,020 families) are living in 1,552
evacuation centers. The large majority of people are living outside
the evacuation centers. Most of the displaced are in 6 regions
(Calabarzon, Mimaropa, Western Visayas, Central Visayas, Eastern
Visayas and Caraga)
• Displacement tracking is ongoing.
• Many people are leaving evacuation centers and building
makeshift shelters next to their damaged houses. The response
needs to reflect this changing need.
• 1,432 tarps were distributed in Palo (Leyte province, Eastern
Visayas), 500 in Medellin and 500 in Bogo (Cebu province, Central
Visayas
Two of Haiyan’s youngest survivors rest in
• Shelter NFIs arriving in Tacloban, moving to other regions soon.
an evacuation center in Tacloban (source)
• Government agencies received tents and supplies to facilitate IDP
registration. Plastic sheets for 4,050 people were distributed in
GOVERNMENT LEAD AGENCY CLUSTER CO-LEAD AGENCY
Tacloban City.
Patrick Elliot, IFRC
Asec Camilo G. Gudmalin
coord.phil@sheltercluster.org
cgudmalin@dswd.gov.ph
patrick.elliott@ifrc.org
0 920 948 5383
SHELTER CLUSTER – TYPHOON HAIYAN 2013
Phil. Int. Dialing Code: +63
0 908 401 1218
OCHA SITUATION REPORT NUMBER 14 – NOV 20
DAMAGE: Official numbers now report 1.14 million damaged
houses (570,128 completely destroyed).
38. US RESPONSE - OPERATION DAMAYAN
Department of Defense (DoD): OPERATION DAMAYAN
PRIORITIES:
• Increase potable water production.
• Stabilize the fuel supply to affected areas.
• Continued support of logistical needs to distribute food/relief items, clear debris from
roads, reestablish power, communications, and water production.
• Decrease airport congestion to decrease aircraft take off and landing time.
• Increase the warehousing capacity at airports, distribution and evacuation centers.
NEEDS:
• Water production and logistics, mainly ground transportation and fuel.
• Greatest needs in affected areas are water, shelter, food, and medical assistance.
• Debris removal to allow ground access to affected areas.
• EX) Main highway south of Guiuan to the end of the peninsula: one major
obstruction with only one passable lane. Light lift equipment is required to
remove obstruction.
RESPONSE
• The last 24 hours Delivery of water and shelter items have been successful and have
been delivered to Tacloban, Borongan and Guiuan.
• All municipalities in Leyte province are now accessible. In addition, 146 roads have
been repaired and cleared of debris in MIMAROPA, Bicol and Eastern, Central and
Western Visayas regions.
• Airlifts containing aid delivery continue to be successful
Field Notice: Current Requests for Information
What is the current status of secondary roads and roads around HLZs in Eastern Samar and
Leyte?
What are the environmental conditions surrounding port facilities on Samar and Leyte
(underwater debris, etc.)?
Admiral's Morning Brief UNCLAS - Nov 20
US DoD - Ospreys Fly Supplies to Remote Areas in Philippines
US DoD - Military, USAID Continue Relief Efforts in Philippines
OCHA SIT-REP 13 – NOV 19
GAPS AND CONSTRAINTS
• Lack of medical facilities and the slow pace of relief operations causing
further harm to individuals and vulnerable communities.
• Inadequate helicopter landing zone preparation increases risk to crew
and equipment: soft ground (sand and marsh lands, in some areas)
uneven ground, debris coverage.
• Medium to large passive and aggressive crowds, with varying
levels of organization are present at landing zones (crowds of
30-200+ people reported), in some cases rushing the aircraft,
increases the risk of competition for aid and the potential for
violence.
• Minimal security at some landing zones has disallowed aircraft
to land. Aid is delivered via hoist in-flight.
• Weather conditions have prohibited helicopters from accessing
Tacloban Airfield.
• Congestion at Tacloban Airfield has forced aircraft to circle for 40
minutes before clearance to land.
• Areas inland of Matarinao Bay in mountainous regions are inaccessible
by roads due to rain washouts
• Main highway north of Guiuan appears intact and unobstructed;
however 30% of secondary roads are passable.
39. US RESPONSE
USAID/OFDA RESPONSE:
•
•
•
USAID and DoD assistance helps restore water service to most Tacloban residents.
‒ USAID/OFDA and DoD will continue to support Tacloban’s water production
in the coming days, until the GPH and humanitarian partners can organize
additional fuel suppliers.
The USAID DART has established a forward operating base at Tacloban, posting a
logistics officer and a military liaison officer at the city’s airport to strengthen
coordination with other humanitarian stakeholders and enable closer tracking of USG
commodities scheduled for distribution.
USG humanitarian funding increases from $22.5 million to $27.2 million, primarily to
augment logistical activities.
STATUS UPDATE:
•
•
On November 16, USAID DART members noted significant improvements in the speed
and efficiency of relief supply distributions at the GPH Department of Social Welfare
and Development (DSWD) warehouse in Tacloban.
The DART also visited a portion of the most-affected areas of Tacloban and observed
rapid improvements in road clearing and cleanup operations.
A USAID worker assesses the needs of a Philippine woman. USAID Facebook.
USAID Fact Sheet No. 8 - Nov 19
40. 23 NOV 2013
Health Meeting (Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 08:00
Eastern Visayas Regional Medical Center
(DOH OpCen)
Philippines
Ms. Patricia Kormoss
0908-892-0515
kormossp@wpro.who.int
Donor Briefing (Manila)
23/11/2013 - 10:00
ILO Auditorium (19th floor, Yuchengco
Tower, RCBC Plaza, Makati City)
Philippines
Shelter Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 14:00
Philippines
Education Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 14:30
Leyte National High School
Philippines
Nonoy Fajardo
0917-542-9875
lfajardo@unicef.org
Early Recovery Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 14:30
OSOCC
Philippines
Tim Walsh
0915-807-5756
CCCM Meeting (Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 15:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Conrad Navidad
0908-865-4543
https://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info/ca
lendar
CLUSTER MEETINGS
WASH Cluster Meeting
(Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 16:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Silvia Ramos
0906-516-0271
Coordination Meeting
(Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 18:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Sebastian Rhodes Stampa
0926-690-3679
General Coordination Meeting
(Guiuan)
23/11/2013 - 18:00
Philippines
Mark McCarthy
+882167000964
Coordination Meeting (Roxas)
23/11/2013 - 18:00
(ROXAS provincial hall)
Philippines
UNDAC
+63 91 86569199
Public Information and
Communications Meeting
(Tacloban)
23/11/2013 - 19:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Matthew Cochrane
0906-572-3983
24 NOV 2013
Health Meeting (Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 08:00
Eastern Visayas Regional Medical Center
(DOH OpCen)
Philippines
Ms. Patricia Kormoss
0908-892-0515
kormossp@wpro.who.int
Donor Briefing (Manila)
24/11/2013 - 10:00
ILO Auditorium (19th floor, Yuchengco
Tower, RCBC Plaza, Makati City)
Philippines
Shelter Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 14:00
Philippines
Education Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 14:30
Leyte National High School
Philippines
Nonoy Fajardo
0917-542-9875
lfajardo@unicef.org
Early Recovery Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 14:30
OSOCC
Philippines
Tim Walsh
0915-807-5756
CCCM Meeting (Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 15:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Conrad Navidad
0908-865-4543
WASH Cluster Meeting
(Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 16:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Silvia Ramos
0906-516-0271
Coordination Meeting
(Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 18:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Sebastian Rhodes Stampa
0926-690-3679
General Coordination Meeting
(Guiuan)
24/11/2013 - 18:00
Philippines
Mark McCarthy
+882167000964
Coordination Meeting (Roxas)
24/11/2013 - 18:00
(ROXAS provincial hall)
Philippines
UNDAC
+63 91 86569199
Public Information and
Communications Meeting
(Tacloban)
24/11/2013 - 19:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Matthew Cochrane
0906-572-3983
41. CLUSTER MEETINGS - 25 NOV 2013
Daily Press Briefing (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 07:30
Tacloban Town Hall
Philippines
mildren@un.org
Early Recovery Cluster Meeting (Manila)
25/11/2013 - 10:00
Room 506 Yuchengco Institute for
Advanced Studies, 5F Yuchencgco Tower 2
Philippines
Alma Evangelista
Alma.Evangelista@undp.org
Donor Briefing (Manila)
25/11/2013 - 10:00
ILO Auditorium (19th floor, Yuchengco
Tower, RCBC Plaza, Makati City)
Philippines
Cash Working Group Meeting
25/11/2013 - 11:30 to 13:00
Rm. 530, Yuchengco Tower 2
RCBC Plaza
Makati City
Philippines
Carla Lacerda
0929-7958061
asia@cashlearning.org
MIRA assessment Meeting
25/11/2013 - 13:00
TBD
Makati City
Philippines
Cecilia Utas
0927 2367019
utas@un.org
Education Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 14:00
DepEd Regional Office
Philippines
Susan Acuin / Yul Olaya
Shelter Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 14:00
Philippines
Early Recovery Cluster Meeting
(Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 15:00
OSOCC
Philippines
LTC Edwin Sadang / Christophe Charbon
CCCM Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 15:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Conrad Navidad
0908-865-4543
Inter-Cluster Coordination Meeting
(Manila)
25/11/2013 - 15:00
tbc
Philippines
Nutrition Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 15:00
OpCen EWRMC
Philippines
Dina A. Leilane / Mathisen Rogers
WASH Cluster Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 16:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Silvia Ramos
0906-516-0271
Shelter Cluster Meeting (Manila)
25/11/2013 - 17:00
19th floor, ILO (RCBC Plaza)
Philippines
Patrick Elliot
09084011218
coord.phil@sheltercluster.org
Health Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 17:00
Eastern Visayas Regional Medical Center
(DOH OpCen)
Philippines
Boy Llacuna / Dana van Alphen
Security Briefing (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 17:00
OSOCC
Philippines
LTC Madarang / John Schot
Coordination Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 18:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Sebastian Rhodes Stampa
0926-690-3679
General Coordination Meeting
(Guiuan)
25/11/2013 - 18:00
Philippines
Mark McCarthy
+882167000964
Coordination Meeting (Roxas)
25/11/2013 - 18:00
(ROXAS provincial hall)
Philippines
UNDAC
+63 91 86569199
Logistics Cluster Coordination
Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 19:00
Philippines
Public Information and
Communications Meeting (Tacloban)
25/11/2013 - 19:00
OSOCC
Philippines
Matthew Cochrane
0906-572-3983
WASH Cluster Meeting Eastern Samar
Hub
25/11/2013 - 18:00
PDRRMC Office
Borongan City, Samar
Philippines
Ms Christie Sidro
https://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info/calendar
42. COORDINATION HUBS
NAME
TELEPHONE
EMAIL
LOCATION
ADDRESS 1
ADDRESS
2
CITY
STATE
POSTAL
COUNTRY
CODE
Busuanga
Unknown
philippines@humanitarianresp
onse.info
IV-B (MIMAROPA)
Unknown
Busuanga IV-B
5317
PH
Cebu
Unknown
philippines@humanitarianresp
onse.info
VII (Central Visayas)
Unknown
Cebu
VII
6000
PH
Mindanao
9600
PH
Cotabato Sub- +63 (0) 64 421
muktar@un.org
Office
7935
Cotabato City
No. 080 Rufo Manara St.
Davao City
082 285 2562 schmidtm@un.org
Samal City
No. 384. Sampaguita,
corner Tulip Street, Juna Matina
subdivision
Davao City Region 11
1124
PH
Guian
Unknown
Unknown
Guian
6809
PH
Manila
+63 (0) 843
9553
ochaphilippines@un.org
30/F, Yuchengco Tower, Ayala
RCBC Plaza
Avenue
Makati City NCR
1226
PH
Roxas
Unknown
philippines@humanitarianresp
VI (Western Visayas)
onse.info
Capiz Government
Business Centre
Roxas
VI
5800
PH
Tacloban
unknown
undac.tacloban@gmail.com
Tacloban City Hall, 1F
Sen. Enage St cor
Magsaysay Blvd
Tacloban
VIII
6500
PH
philippines@humanitarianresp
onse.info
VIII (Eastern Visayas)
Metro Manila(NCR)
VIII (Eastern Visayas)
Rosary
Cotabato
Heights 10 City
VIII
https://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info/system/files/documents/files/Contact%20List_Cluster%20co-leads_Typhoon%20Haiyan_Yolanda%2013Nov2013.pdf