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Health Crisis Hits Rural
Afghans
By Malalai Shinwari
In remote Paktika province, women face enormous
obstacles getting even basic medical treatment.
June 16, 2005 - (The Institute for War and Peace) We could hear
the women's moans very clearly outside Paktika's only hospital,
where relatives of the patients waited in the cold, windy weather.
Esmatullah, 55, wiped dust from his eyes with the end of his turban.
He told me that his daughter was inside, and that he had brought
her here from his home in Khair Koot, a remote part of Paktika.
Travel in the mountainous south-eastern province is difficult and
expensive - the trip had cost him fifty US dollars.
(We have neither doctors nor hospitals in our area, and people die
from minor illnesses, he said, leaning against the hospital wall.
(I do not know why the government is not paying attention to Paktika
v we are also part of Afghanistan.
Paktika's hospital is situated in Sharana, the provincial centre.
It is only one-storey tall, painted yellow, with a metal roof. But
residents of Sharana are proud of the facility, which is the only
cement structure in the whole province. Even though there is no
running water, and no electricity except that created by the hospital's
own generator, the building stands out as a beacon of modernity.
There is a surgical ward and an X-ray machine, and there will be
a laboratory sometime in the future.
Health care in this remote province of Afghanistan is rudimentary
at best. There is a serious shortage of doctors, because medical
graduates are reluctant to leave the capital, especially for a region
as difficult as Paktika. Located in Afghanistan's south-eastern
corner, it still has pockets of Taleban and al-Qaeda activity that
make working there dangerous as well as challenging.
For women, of course, the difficulties are compounded. A UNICEF
study released in 2002 called Afghanistan (the worst place in the
world to become pregnant. Half of all deaths of Afghan women between
the ages of 15 and 49 are due to complications surrounding pregnancy
and childbirth. Paktika was not part of the study but Badakhshan,
another mountainous province in the northwest part of the country,
showed the highest maternal mortality rate ever recorded globally
v 6,500 maternal deaths per 100,000 births.
Most were preventable, the study showed. Only seven per cent of
the documented deaths occurred when a doctor or qualified nurse
was in attendance. Afghan women are highly unlikely to go to a male
doctor, and the Taleban's prohibition on female education ensured
that the supply of women doctors would be virtually nil.
In Sharana, there are ten doctors on the hospital staff, but only
two are women. Out of 20 rooms in the hospital, two are devoted
to female patients. The imbalance is stark - while the male wards
were half empty on the day IWPR visited, the women¦s rooms
were full to overflowing.
Each ward has ten beds. Most of the patients had come from remote
areas of Paktika, and were waiting to be seen by one of the female
doctors. When this reporter walked in, I was besieged by women asking
me to check their pulse, telling me their symptoms. When I told
them I was not a doctor they moved away, disappointed. But some
were eager to share their stories with a journalist.
(My sister got pregnant and when we tried to take her to the hospital
she died on the way. The roads are very bad. This is how women live
in our province,¦ one woman told me, covering her face with
her headscarf.
Dr Zainab is one of the two women physicians on the hospital staff.
She lives at the hospital with her eight-year-old daughter, and
is concerned over the lack of schools in the region. (These women
really need me, but the future of my daughter is also important,
and I want to go back to Kabul, she said.
Many of the women in the ward complained that their husbands had
gone abroad to seek work. Given the Afghan tradition of a bride
moving in with her husband's family, these women were dependent
on their in-laws, who may not attend to their needs.
Women are brought to the hospital only when matters have reached
a crisis point, (We get a lot who are in a coma v these are usually
women whose husbands are abroad,¦ the doctor added.
Gulab Mangal, the governor of Paktika, agreed that health care in
his province was well below par, but was quick to assign blame elsewhere.
(The media publishes bad information about Paktika, saying it is
dangerous and no one wants to work here, he said. (International
organisations have come, but they have not done enough.
The health ministry also confirmed that Afghanistan¦s women
are facing a health crisis of major proportions. (Nearly 50 women
lose their lives every single day, said Health Minister Sayeed Muhammad
Amin Fatemi.
As bad as the situation is in Sharana, it is much worse once you
leave central Paktika. The roads are so bad that our heads were
hitting the roof of the car, and I tried to imagine how it would
be to bring a sick person along this route. We passed caravans of
Kuchis (nomads) coming from Pakistan. The minute I got out of the
car I was surrounded. (Please, give me a pill, said one old woman.
(I have had a fever for a month.
When I told her I was not a doctor, she shrugged, and said, (Then
I must be going. I need to follow my camels.
I asked another Kuchi woman what she will do if she gets pregnant
and delivers a child during her travels. She just smiled, uncomprehendingly,
(We will take the child with us, of course.
We headed towards Sar-rozai, a village to the south of Sharana.
There we met more of the same. One widow showed me her hands. She
had fallen during the winter and broken her wrists. A village healer
had tried to help, but no professional care had been available.
(Now my hands are so weak I cannot work, she said.
Abdul Rahman, the district chief of Sar-rozai, said that all of
the area¦s problems could be solved if the government would
pay more attention to Paktika. The media was also to blame, he added,
for publishing reports that made doctors afraid to come to the province.
But there is one bright spot on the horizon - Sar-rozai will soon
have its own hospital. All they need now is doctors brave enough
to go there.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/wp/wp_003_01_eng.txt
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