– Cyclone Ditwah exposed critical gaps in Sri Lanka’s health and disaster response systems. – Health and disaster agencies lack integrated dashboards and real-time data, forcing frontline workers to rely on informal, siloed information during emergencies. – Building integrated coordination platforms and climate-health surveillance systems can create climate-resilient health systems. As Sri Lanka currently counts human and economic costs of Cyclone Ditwah, the images are both disturbing and somewhat familiar: flooded hospitals, access roads buried by landslides, evacuation centres overflowing with displaced families, and officials in health and disaster management services scrambling to meet everyone’s needs. The death toll is…
After Cyclone Ditwah: Climate-proofing Sri Lanka’s health system
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