Consistent with the WFP’s November 2025 Outlook, IOM’s PRMN displacement trends, and ACAPS real-time community feedback reports, Talk to Loop has seen substantial increases this month. A greater number of community members (mostly women) are seeking life-saving assistance amid the continuing drought. This surge is attributed to failed Deyr rains, increasing prices, and diminished aid resulting from funding reductions.
This pattern is evident in both open feedback, which rose by 248%, and sensitive feedback, which mainly consists of urgent requests for healthcare access due to illness or the presence of ill or malnourished family members. Concurrently, there has been a decrease in organizational response rates to both open feedback and sensitive referrals, alongside an increase in communities engaging with Loop as the services they previously received have been discontinued.