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    Afghanistan: Uncertainty, but still full hospitals

    Women and children gather in the female inpatient ward in Boost hospital, Lashkar Gah, Helmand. 2016. Ⓒ Kadir Van Lohuizen/Noor

    Women and children gather in the female inpatient ward in Boost hospital, Lashkar Gah, Helmand. Picture was taken in 2016. Ⓒ Kadir Van Lohuizen/Noor 

    Below two medical staff working in Lashkar Gah and Khost describe the recent changes they have witnessed, and how they affect both patients and healthcare providers alike.  

     

    Lashkar Gah: ‘Our hospital is now full’

    The situation in Lashkar Gah is now calm, but there remains some anxiety and uncertainty, and people who delayed getting medical help while there was active fighting are now coming to the Doctors Without Borders-supported Boost provincial hospital. As a result, over the past few days, the emergency room has been full, with many people suffering from respiratory and gastrointestinal problems, and trauma-related injuries as a result of the fighting and also road traffic accidents. Between 15 and 21 August, over 3,600 patients received consultations in the emergency room and 415 were admitted to hospital. A medic working the Boost hospital shares their experience.

    “On 1 August I came to the Boost provincial hospital in Lashkar Gah and spent thirteen days working there. The medical needs were very high; we received a lot of patients wounded in the fighting. But most of our regular patients (sick children, pregnant women, patients in need of more routine surgical care), which previously numbered around 500 a day, stayed away because access to the hospital was at times made impossible by the fighting. 

    Patients waiting for their operation in Boost hospital which is run by MSF in partnership with the Ministry of Public Health.

    Patients waiting for their operations in Boost hospital is run by Doctors Without Borders in partnership with the Ministry of Public Health. Picture was taken in 2016. © Kadir Van Lohuizen/Noor 

    Samiullah, 12 years old, suffered a gunshot wound to the head on 4 May. His family had to cross gardens and a river, travelling for two and a half hours to avoid fighting before reaching Boost hospital.

    Samiullah, 12 years old, suffered a gunshot wound to the head on 4 May. His family had to cross gardens and a river, travelling for two and a half hours to avoid fighting before reaching Boost hospital, Helmand province, Afghanistan. Picture was taken in 2021. © Tom Casey/MSF

    After the fighting ended on 13 August, we stopped hearing the heavy sounds of airstrikes, rockets and mortars. The roads in the city and in the surrounding districts are open and people are, once again, coming to the hospital. Patient numbers have increased tremendously. Over the last week or so, we are receiving over 700 patients a day in our emergency room, sometimes more than 800. On 21 August we treated 862 people in our emergency room, which I think is the most we’ve ever received. Some patients are coming in critical conditions because they waited until the fighting had stopped.

    One reason we are seeing this huge number of patients at our hospital is, I think, because other local clinics are not able to meet the needs of the people. We send around 200 less critical patients (known as green cases) to these clinics each day, but many come back reporting that the clinics don’t have drugs they need or that they are closed due to a shortage of staff.

    Our hospital is now full in terms of the number of patients we can admit. We have more than 300 patients already being treated in the hospital.

    We already have more patients in our hospital than we have beds, so the more patients we receive in the emergency room, the greater the problem is finding space for them inside the hospital.

    They are waiting a long time in the emergency room, while we try to find space. We have two patients to a bed in the paediatric ward, but we are still struggling to find room for everyone. So we assess the severity of each patient’s condition because the more severe things are the more they need admitting.

    Each day, between 80 and 100 of the people we assess have severe enough conditions that they must be treated as inpatients in the hospital. This forces us to discharge other patients to make room for them. This is one of the big challenges at the moment. I don’t know how we can solve it in the long term, but for now we are decreasing the length of stay and discharge them with the medicine they need, unless they are in a very critical state. Our intensive care unit is also full. All the districts are now open so that’s another reason we are receiving so many patients, as they are coming from outside the city.

     

    Khost: ’To increase access to healthcare we widened our admission criteria’

    In Khost, Doctors Without Borders runs a maternity hospital and supports eight comprehensive health centres in rural areas. Between 15 and 22 August, the hospital admitted 402 pregnant women and delivered 338 newborns. Thirty-three babies were treated in the hospital’s neonatal ward. A medic working in the hospital shares their experience.

    “Although the city of Khost didn’t experience the heavy fighting seen in other places, we are facing tough times. Markets, local transport systems and most private clinics are closed. People’s access to healthcare is now very limited. A single delivery in a private clinic can cost 3 to 5 thousand Afghani [35 to 60 USD], which is adding extra pressure on the families.

    Dr Rasha Khoury conducts a Caesarean section in Khost maternity hospital. 2017

    Dr Rasha Khoury conducts a Caesarean section in Khost maternity hospital. Picture was taken in 2017. © Pau Miranda/MSF 

    MSF health promoter Noor-U-Rahman explains the danger signs to look out for during pregnancy to a group of caretakers at the MSF-supported Tani comprehensive health centre, Khost province, Afghanistan.

    Doctors Without Borders health promoter Noor-U-Rahman explains the danger signs to look out for during pregnancy to a group of caretakers at the Doctors Without Borders-supported Tani comprehensive health centre, Khost province. Picture was taken in 2021. © Tom Casey/MSF 

    People are facing so much uncertainty, especially pregnant women. They try to save money and, since Doctors Without Borders offers its services for free, many pregnant women are coming to the Doctors Without Borders maternity hospital in Khost.

    Previously Doctors Without Borders’ maternity hospital in Khost had focused on providing medical care to pregnant women who were facing complications. However, to increase access to healthcare for the community, we widened our admission criteria and now give medical care to any pregnant woman to help them deliver their baby.

    Local organisations we work with are telling us about the difficulty in accessing healthcare facing remote communities. The transport system isn’t fully functioning and we are worried about breaks in the supply chains for essential, lifesaving medications. 

    In spite of these challenges, Doctors Without Borders is committed to continuing our medical activities and to meeting the health needs of mothers and children in conflict affected communities.”

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