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UNFPA responds to emergencies in a wide range of situations and settings. The need might be to reach women in a refugee camp to work only with men, or to find internally displaced persons who are dispersed throughout the local population. Conditions may be hostile or hospitable, politically charged or on the path to peace; they are never easy. After unrest in East Timor damaged or destroyed almost every medical facility, UNFPA worked with NGOs in 1999 to distribute equipment for clinics and supplies as basic as soap, plastic sheeting and a razor blade for cutting the umbilical cord of a newborn. In Honduras, local reproductive health facili- tators were trained to visit the temporary shelters and hastily. | Reproductive Tract Infection Lessons Learned from the Field Where do we go from here Report of a seminar presented under the auspices of the Population Council s Robert H. Ebert Program on Critical Issues in Reproductive Health and Population February 6-7 1995 New York New York Editorial Assistance Jennifer Grant M.A. Diana M. Measham MSc. The Population Council The Robert H. Ebert Program on Critical Issues in Reproductive Health and Population One Dag Hammarskjold Plaza New York NY 10017 USA Telephone 212 339-0500 Fax 2l2 755-6052 Published March 1996 Cover and text printed on recycled paper in the USA ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful to the Ford Foundation for generous support of the seminar and production of this publication and to the Rockefeller Foundation for support of the seminar. In addition some seminar participants were supported with USAID and SIDA funds. We also thank Virginia Kallianes for assistance in preparing this .