Rapid emergency response is key to curbing measles spread
One of the key components of MSF’s response is our mobile emergency team, which can respond quickly and directly to communities’ urgent medical needs by mobilizing resources, setting up temporary clinics, and providing immediate medical care. This rapid response capability is crucial to controlling the spread of infectious diseases like measles.
The team is currently treating patients in the isolation ward at Al-Wahda Hospital, which has a capacity of 40 beds. We also provide free medical consultations through three mobile clinics that travel across six districts in the governorate. Given the difficulties these patients face in accessing necessary health care, the team also provides referrals and patient transport services from the mobile clinics to the isolation center and transfers severe cases to more advanced medical centers.
Between April and July 2025, the MSF team has treated more than 1,400 measles patients in Dhamar at Al-Wahda Hospital and mobile clinics, with more than 56 percent of patients being children under 5. While it is difficult to identify all the factors that increase the challenges of combating measles and other preventable diseases, significant gaps in routine vaccination and limited access to basic health care facilities play a major role in the large increase in the number of measles patients.