Right now, the entire world is affected by the coronavirus pandemic. UN teams covering 162 countries and territories are stepping up efforts and working around the clock with governments and partners to prevent and respond to COVID-19.
Here are nine ways our UN teams are working to address what UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described as the greatest global crisis since World War II.
1. Uniting against COVID-19
To respond to this complex global pandemic, governments are partnering with the 51Թ to save lives, protect livelihoods and minimize potential social and economic setbacks. ILO predicts that up to 25 million jobs could be lost.
In, the UN is partnering with governments and all of societies for a coordinated response.
In, the team is focused on health, child protection, gender-based violence prevention and food provision. “This response makes it evident that we are bridging the immediate health and humanitarian demands with the need to kick-start early recovery and place countries back on their track towards sustainable development,” said, UN Resident coordinator.
Led by thePan-American Health Organization/WHO,the team is providing guidance and support on surveillance measures, laboratory diagnosis, infection control, health system preparedness and social distancing measures and with risk communication.
2. Addressing the social and economic impact for rapid recovery
The pandemic is attacking societies at their core. After reassessing the prospect for growth for 2020 and 2021, IMF declared that we have entered a recession – potentially worse than in 2009.
To support the economic recovery efforts, the UN is establishing a newto respond to the emergency and recovery efforts in low- and middle-income countries.
According to the, UN Resident Coordinators leading UN teams worldwide are the drivers of the UN’s response on the ground.
The UN team inhas mobilized $2 million to procure essential medical supplies to support the Government’s response to COVID-19. This will support the Nigeria COVID-19 Response Fund, which will help to coordinate partnerships and mobilize resources.
In Peru, the Pan-American Health Organization/WHO, ILO, UNDP, UNHCR, IOM and UNFPA are partnering with the government to help the impacted healthcare system; protect workers’ rights; support communication efforts; work with migrants and refugees and ensure access to sexual and reproductive health services.
3. Staying ahead of the curve
In several countries, even before COVID-19 cases were confirmed, UN teams were proactively working with Ministries of Health and other partners to prepare for the pandemic.
Before there were confirmed cases in, WHO andthe UN Resident Coordinator, were already working together on the preparedness and response plan. Together, they are helping to build lab-testing capacity, recruit public health experts and engage local entrepreneurs to produce needed supplies. Additionally, the World Food Programme (WFP), UNICEF and WHO are supporting with supply chain and logistics, supplies procurement and water and sanitation repair. The UN and Government are also boosting economic efforts through temporary cash transfers and national identification programmes.
In, upon the Government’s request, the UN team is helping to train health workers to care for patients with COVID-19, as well as themselves. Also, the Resident Coordinator and WHO are working on resource mobilization and re-purposing previous funding to procure critical supplies for the country’s response.
4. Boosting governments’ communications strategies
“The fight against COVID-19 is largely a communications battle: to change habits, to wash hands, to stay at home, to keep social distancing, to be kind, stay calm and be connected,” saidin. Upon the Government’s request, the UN team has deployed communications experts to different government entities to support with their crisis communication.
In, the UN team assists national and local efforts to share information on COVID-19 through offline and online media, including social videos that have reached more than 1 billion views. The team is also finding innovative ways to support the response through.
In, the UN team, WHO, UNFPA and UNICEF trained more than 30 communications professionals from the government and other sectors on risk communications. The training accompanies a UN-backed campaign with the government to make material more available across the country and online in Uzbek and Russian.
5. Engaging the private sector
The UN is establishing new streams of support by teaming up with private sector partners across the globe to help with the relief efforts.
In,the– a UN initiative that engages businesses in the COVID-19 response – gathers information on companies’ COVID-19 response efforts. The aim is to map and help address workers’ rights and safety. One example is one of the biggest beverage companieshasshifted its production to makehalf a million alcohol-based sanitizer bottles.
In Nigeria, a container company, APM Terminals Nigeria, has contributed $200,000 towards the UN’s fund to help mobilize resources to boost the response efforts of the government. With the government, the UN is mobilizing funds to ensure access to essential health equipment needed for medical testing, quarantine facilities and healthcare services.
6. Supporting home schooling needs
More than 1.52 billion children and youth are currently out of school or university, which accounts for 87 per cent of the students enrolled. According to UNESCO, nearly 60.2 million teachers are no longer in the classroom.With millions of children needing to study from home, governments had to quickly prepare distance-learning programmes worldwide:
In, UNICEF and partners have organized online classes available for migrants and refugees residing in the temporary reception centres.
In, UNICEF is supporting with water and sanitation efforts, as well as on schools and community education.
In, the UN is supporting the Government with awareness raising materials such as posters and leaflets, and home-schooling preparedness needs for the school system.
7. Fast-tracking procurement for immediate health needs
The UN has implemented fast-track methods to ensure the most efficient means of obtaining the life-savings goods and services needed on the ground worldwide.
In Argentina, UNOPS is helping to urgently procure eight fully equipped emergency modular hospitals that will provide an additional 560 inpatient therapy beds. One third of the area will be dedicated to intensive care units.
In, while there are no confirmed COVID-19 cases according to WHO figures, the UN team helped set up a laboratory to test for COVID-19 and constructed a multi-purpose infectious disease unit to isolate and treat suspected cases. The team also helped trainhealth workers.
In, the UN is helping to procure urgent medical equipment to diagnose, treat and monitor patients. It is also advising on mitigation actions tohelp ensure that the provision of existing healthcare services continues as planned, including the purchase of essential medicines and equipment.
8. Making sure women and girls are safe at home, where most acts of violence occur
Globally, 243 million women and girls aged 15 to 49 have experienced violence by an intimate partner in the last year,. The home can be the most dangerous place for some women as many women are being forced to ‘lockdown’ at home with their abusers at the same time that services to support survivors are disrupted or inaccessible.
According to the SG’s, there has been an increase of upwards of 25% of reported cases of violence against women so far. In some countries reported cases have doubled.
To protect the safety and security of women and girls, UN entities worldwide are working with governments and implementing partners, especially in Latin America and the Caribbean, which has one of the world’s highest rates of femicide and gender-based violence. In Argentina and Guatemala,through the EU-UN backedUN Women is supporting national and local authorities to ensure continued services to survivors of domestic violence.
The UN has also supported withacross the globe to make resources and services accessible for women virtually.
9. Leaving no one behind
From translating campaigns to languages for ethnic minorities and addressing measures to protect indigenous peoples, migrants and refugees, people with disabilities, populations in prisons and people living with HIV, UN teams are making sure their response efforts leave no one behind.
In, UN teams are providing access to education, resources and employment opportunities to migrants and refugees from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria and elsewhere—especially for the women.
In Brazil, the UN has deployed experts to respond to needs of the migrants and refugees that reside in the states that border Venezuela. UNAIDS is supporting with outreach and access to medication for people living with HIV. UNDP is working with judges to adopt non-custodial measures for mothers, people with disabilities, indigenous people, and persons in prison.
In, WHO is prioritizing prevention, preparedness and risk communication by supporting health responders to detect, diagnose and prevent spread, surveillance of entry-points, provision of protective equipment and training of health workers. Health facilities and selected intensive care units are being prepared and communities most at risk have been identified.