Humanitarian organizations also have to make impossible choices. What measures should we take to prevent a potential spread of the virus? Should we stop our work in the camps to prevent people gathering in front of our mobile clinics or during our distributions of essential items? Are we protecting people if we stop our activities, or are we depriving them of essential services and therefore potentially putting their health at greater risk? This dilemma is being faced constantly by those in our field of work.

MSF has decided to keep our activities running. This is because we know that the assistance we provide, even if it does not cover all the needs, is vital for tens of thousands of people across Idlib. And because more than 35 percent of the patients we see in our mobile clinics are already suffering from respiratory infections, and a potential spread of the virus could quickly lead to complications. People need our help, and we don’t want to stop providing it. But we are also adapting our activities and trying to act responsibly in the face of a potential spread of COVID-19.

Adapting our response

In the camps, we’ve started implementing measures of social distancing when providing our regular services. When running mobile clinics, we now only allow small groups of people to gather around our trucks while waiting for consultations. During distributions of essential items, we ask people to keep a certain distance between each other. This way, we are still helping displaced people, but we are also decreasing the risks of them getting the virus when coming for assistance. Of course, we also want to protect our own teams and have equipped them with protective equipment, so they can continue working in the camps.

We’ve been working on getting ready at the hospital level too. The medical facilities that remain open in Idlib province play a vital role for the population, and we need to focus on supporting them in getting prepared. We’ve set up hygiene committees in three different hospitals already supported by MSF. We’ve also set up new triage systems in these facilities to better identify and isolate patients with suspected COVID-19. And we are conducting trainings in patient-flow management in coordination with local health authorities and the World Health Organization (WHO).

What it will take

We are putting everything we can in place, but pragmatically speaking it probably won’t be enough if COVID-19 starts spreading tomorrow in Idlib province. What is happening in northwest Syria today is a humanitarian emergency. A public health emergency in the midst of all this could quickly become catastrophic. Unless….

Unless there is immediate international mobilization. Unless medics and humanitarian organizations are given the means to tackle this potential catastrophe properly before it happens. Unless hospitals are given the supplies and equipment they need to face this ‘crisis on top of a crisis’.

But the answer to this situation cannot only be medical. Healthcare is of course key, but it is not the only need in Idlib. People still need food, people still need shelter, people still need sanitation. When facing a pandemic, all of these things are essential.

COVID-19 is touching everyone around the world. Whether people are in Syria or in Italy, they are all connected. This virus affects everybody. And just as this virus has no borders, I hope that solidarity will have no borders either.”