EMT Mission in Papua – New Guinea
Published on 21. June 2022
from CADUS-PR

emt-mission-in-papua-new-guinea-feature-P1001255
Destination country/region: East New Britain, Papua – New Guinea
Period: November- December 2021
Brief description: A ten-strong team of medics has been shadowing the local health system in Papua New Guinea in the fight against Covid-19. There have been many problems there recently due to the delta variant.
Project Progress:
Due to the difficult pandemic situation, the government of Papua – New Guinea asked WHO for medical support. CADUS responded to the request and sent nine medics to Papua New Guinea. There, the team spent three weeks in and around Nonga Hospital, in the East New Britain region. As a shadowing mission, the main focus was on passing on the expert knowledge that the medics had acquired in the two previous years in Germany while treating Corona patients.
Our physicians observed the local hospital routine and processes in order to improve them in cooperation with their Papua New Guinean colleagues. Although the staffing and resource constraints of the local health system were a major challenge, much was already accomplished with relatively little funding. The team provided training on patient positioning, triaging, hygiene and protective clothing for staff. An existing CPAP ventilator was also modified and, with appropriate training, used to ventilate patients.
In this way, our medics, in collaboration with their local colleagues, succeeded in having the most sustainable and positive effect on processes and everyday hospital life in a relatively short period of time.
Trainings and Burns
The financing of our hospital has been secured for the time being and we are continuing to train medical staff e.g. in terms of dealing with the treatment of burns, which we can treat as the only hospital in the camp.
Leave No One Behind
The corona virus is a challenge for all of us. But for refugees in the overcrowded camps on the Greek islands, the risk of an outbreak is far greater. #LeaveNoOneBehind
Resolution regression
While the humanitarian situation in Northeast Syria is still tense and the threat to the health system and people from the so-called corona virus has increased, the work for aid organizations has again been made more difficult.




