Afghan etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Afghan etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

1 Aralık 2016 Perşembe

Fresh hope for Kandahar newborns as Afghan healthcare gets a shot in the arm | Matthew Green

Among the tiniest of the premature babies slumbering in incubators at the Mirwais hospital, one bore a name chosen by hospital staff. At five days old, “Fatima” had been abandoned by her mother after being born so early that her family assumed she was destined for the grave.


Had her relatives grasped the welcome transformation unfolding at the government-run medical centre in Kandahar, the largest city in southern Afghanistan, they might have held their newborn a little tighter.


Where once children crowded three to a bed, single occupancy is now the norm. The number of nurses making the rounds among the rows of infants has doubled, and new incubator units help neonatal specialists nurture the most fragile of lives through their first, vulnerable days.


While much of the news from southern Afghanistan over the past year has been dominated by reports of Taliban advances, the creation of a new paediatric unit at Mirwais hospital has opened a new front in a different campaign: the struggle to reduce extremely high mortality rates among Afghan infants.


Luis Tello, a Spanish paediatrician seconded to the unit by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said the expanded facilities had already helped to persuade more Afghan mothers that, with the right care, even the weakest babies might survive.


“For me, the most astonishing improvement is with [premature] newborns. Before, nobody was taking care of them,” said Tello, speaking in a ward where young children lay on crisp white sheets, mothers at their bedsides. “But we’ve managed to change people’s minds.”


The new unit, which opened in September, is housed in a former nursing clinic in the hospital grounds, converted in a year-long project funded by the ICRC. It has 186 beds, including 15 for mothers – twice the number in the old paediatric wing.


The number of incubators has risen from six to 10, while another new ward caters for children suffering from thalassemia, a hereditary, incurable blood disease prevalent in southern Afghanistan that can be ameliorated with transfusions and medication.


By reducing overcrowding, the unit has dramatically cut the risk of contagious diseases skipping between patients. Staff who might previously have had to discharge barely improved infants to make room for even sicker children can now allow everyone time to recover.


“We won’t force them to go home early,” said Dr Muhammad Sidiq, the unit’s director. “We can let them stay here until they are completely cured.”


The unit is a tangible sign of broader progress in improving infant and maternal health. In contrast to the bleak picture on the battlefield in much of Afghanistan, years of painstaking efforts by the government and donors to improve access to basic healthcare, and train community midwives to assist at births – the vast majority of which take place at home – are yielding significant results.




I’m better off than some people – they’ve lost both their legs and arms


Abdul Matin, 22, student


In 2000, Afghanistan had one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world, with almost 10% of babies dying before their first birthday, according to UN data. Since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001, the picture has changed.


According to a comprehensive health and demographic survey, published by the Afghan government in May, the nationwide mortality rate for all infants fell from 66 to 45 deaths for every 1,000 live births between 2001 and 2015. Similarly, for all children under five, the death rate per 1,000 fell to 55 from 87.


Despite these achievements, infant mortality rates still remain high in many areas, partly due to a lack of basic education about the importance of hygiene during births. Tello explained that deadly sepsis infections could result from the common practice of using a knife to cut an umbilical cord on the sole of a shoe.


Beyond Mirwais, meanwhile, large numbers of rural women have no access to even basic clinics. Some of the mothers arriving at the unit with infants swaddled in shawls had travelled hundreds of kilometres from remote areas. Escalating violence in many parts of Afghanistan has also made facilities harder to reach: a UN study published in April documented reports of 125 security incidents affecting access to healthcare in 2015, compared with 59 in 2014 and 33 in 2013.


While the fighting begins to intensify each spring in Afghanistan, paediatric illness also follows a seasonal cycle, with diarrhoea more common in the summer and pneumonia and other respiratory diseases rife in winter. Doctors have witnessed a marked increase in malnutrition this year, possibly tied to the increasing numbers of people uprooted by fighting in the south. Some of the victims have been brought to a new therapeutic feeding centre in the unit for the most severely underweight.


Making a brisk round of the new wards, checking on patients and issuing rapid-fire instructions to nurses wearing gowns and surgical masks, Tello soon encountered one of the deadliest killers. Holding up a chest x-ray from a tiny boy named Hekmatullah, he scrutinised an image of a ribcage dotted with hundreds of tiny lesions – telltale signs of miliary tuberculosis.


“He’s lucky because he has this x-ray, which is very clear for TB,” Tello said, before hurrying to the next ward, where another listless child was battling pneumococcal meningitis.


That such children can even reach Mirwais hospital reflects the shifting contours of the war in the south. At the height of the US troop surge in Afghanistan in 2010 and 2011, intense fighting in Kandahar province flooded wards and corridors with casualties bearing blast and gunshot wounds. As the vast majority of western forces withdrew ahead of a security handover in 2014, the locus of the conflict in the south shifted into neighbouring Helmand and Uruzgan provinces, which continue to provide the hospital with a steady stream of war-wounded.


In the main hospital, a 22-year-old student named Abdul Matin was undergoing treatment after losing his right arm when a mortar round crashed into his family home in the district of Marjah in Helmand province a month earlier. Sitting up in a bed near other patients lying swaddled in bandages concealing even more grievous wounds, he greeted his injury with a certain degree of resignation.


“This is the situation,” he said. “I’m better off than some people – they’ve lost both their legs and arms.”


Despite the overwhelming challenges many patients face, Tello and his colleagues are starting to offer hope for sick children that many families might once have imagined possible. Though young “Fatima” did not survive, many more Afghans may one day look back and thank the staff at Mirwais hospital for giving them a second chance when they were most in need of help.



Fresh hope for Kandahar newborns as Afghan healthcare gets a shot in the arm | Matthew Green

18 Eylül 2016 Pazar

From Dutch hospital to Afghan clinic: new VR app aims to link 8.5m doctors

Imagine you’re a doctor in Swindon and a patient with a chewing tobacco habit turns up with unusual tongue lesions. What if you could, at the press of a few buttons, locate and get instant advice from the Mumbai-based world expert on cancers related to chewing tobacco?


This is the vision for a new app which aims to transform the way in which 8.5 million doctors around the world share their knowledge and skills.


MDLinking – an expert directory, instant messaging service and video source – began trialling a beta version for iPhones in May this year and aims to launch its full Apple and Android versions before 2017.


The Dutch startup, which has €2.5m of seed funding, has several hundred testers in the Netherlands, 4,000 registered doctors so far and is in talks with organisations including Médecins Sans Frontièresand the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) about using its free software.


“The original idea was that if doctors worldwide connect with each other and share knowledge, healthcare will improve on a global level” says Alec Behrens, co-founder of Booking.com and founding partner of MDLinking.


Instant messaging


Many doctors are already using instant messaging tools to discuss patient cases. A 2015 survey found more than 30% of doctors surveyed said they were sending patient related information over services such as WhatsApp.


Vascular surgeon Hans Flu, co-founder of MDLinking, came up with the idea for the secure healthcare network when he realised just how much his colleagues were using WhatsApp. He had privacy concerns over the app and worried about its plans to share account information with parent company Facebook.


Ultimately, however, Flu wants to find a solution to what he sees as the big problem in the medical world: communication. “If you communicate badly, the patient’s going to suffer, and this is a key element that everyone can improve. This is a tool developed by medical doctors, for medical doctors, that is free.”


As well as being a directory and secure instant messaging tool (it only accepts vetted medical professionals), the start-up is using virtual reality technology to record operations from multiple viewpoints, to form an interactive teaching tool – especially for countries where operating theatres are scarce.



Dr Hans Flu, co-founder of MDLinking

Dr Hans Flu, co-founder of MDLinking Photograph: Hans Flu

Gijs Walraven, director for health at AKDN – which operates a non-profit, private healthcare system in developing world communities – is interested in collaborating with the MDLinking tool.


“AKDN’s work in health is mainly in sub-Saharan Africa, central and south Asia,” he says. “In these countries, there are fewer medical doctors and they have much more limited opportunities to consult with colleagues on difficult cases as well as to [access] education. New ways to interact at a distance and in a secure manner could play a very important role to improve this.


“Learning new operating techniques and how to better diagnose using the innovative video techniques that MDLinking is developing could be a real breakthrough.” And it works both ways, he says: “Healthcare providers in rural settings in Afghanistan have knowledge and skills that could be beneficial to health practitioners in London.”


Teaching by virtual reality


Dr Gijs van Acker, a surgeon at Medisch Centrum Haaglanden hospital in the Netherlands, first created teaching videos for his vascular surgery website a decade ago. “One of my residents was Hans Flu, and when he started MDLinking I said, ‘You need something that’s educational’. We wanted to make something more intuitive than 2D films,” he says.


They came up with virtual reality combined with the view-selection interface, allowing users to flick to different sections of the operation. Traditional teaching methods can’t compete, according to van Acker, who says that dead body tissue loses its colour, so isn’t the same teaching experience, while students observing actual operations are often distracted by nerves.


He has recorded four 3D operations for MDLinking so far and – thanks to a partnership providing Samsung equipment – these are viewable via mobiles and virtual reality headsets.


As the app is free, the business plans to raise revenue by broadcasting sponsored medical conference content and acting as a recruitment site for international medical placements. It wants to establish video centres in different places around the world using tools and facilities available there – for example, treating appendicitis in remote Africa.


Kiran Jobanputra, deputy head of the Manson Unit at Médecins Sans Frontières in London, says the organisation is looking into MDLinking as it develops a medical IT strategy. “Until something is piloted and evaluated, it is hard to say, but I do see potential in this app,” he says. “Having been a field doctor, I came up against huge difficulty getting access to information, particularly relevant technical advice.”


He says MSF medical experts at the London HQ and its telemedicine platform have time, context and connectivity limitations. “MSF clinicians are using WhatsApp groups of colleagues to get rapid, relevant advice – although it’s not an official MSF tool, and some people in the organisation might not agree with it,” he says. “That MDLinking ‘LinkedIn’ function to join or create a new group of people happy to give their opinion, with regional experience, has huge potential.


“I suspect the educational content will still require connectivity of too high bandwidth. We’re not testing MDLinking at the moment but if it comes on to Android, which is the main smartphone operating system in the contexts we work in, we probably will.


“The sharing economy isn’t new – in our medical studies we are taught ‘see one, do one, teach one’ – but barriers to sharing information are getting lower.”



From Dutch hospital to Afghan clinic: new VR app aims to link 8.5m doctors

8 Temmuz 2014 Salı

Afghan Taliban bans polio vaccination teams from southern Helmand

AFGHANISTAN-HEALTH-POLIO

An Afghan health worker administers polio vaccine drops to a child. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images




The Afghan Taliban has banned polio vaccination teams from southern Helmand province because it suspects them of spying for the government at a time of heavy clashes with government forces, the insurgent group said in a statement on its website.


The announcement is a worrying development, because although Taliban groups across the border in Pakistan have attacked and killed polio vaccinators for years, their Afghan counterparts have mostly supported, or at least tolerated, international efforts to wipe out the disease.


The last time polio vaccinators were blocked from part of Afghanistan, the insurgent group denied any role and said it supported efforts to stop the disease.


Afghanistan is one of just three countries, along with Pakistan and Nigeria, where polio is still endemic. There has been a rise in cases this year, with seven reported so far compared with just three for the same period of 2013, according to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.


The group said Helmand has been off limits to vaccinators since February, but did not give a reason. The southern province has seen fierce fighting between insurgent and government forces in recent weeks, and the Taliban’s statement was the first indication it had chased out polio eradication teams.


“We have stopped vaccination in Helmand for the moment,” the Taliban said in a statement posted on its website this week. “The vaccinators were also collecting information about the Taliban and Taliban commanders, they were spying.”


The statement said they had asked UN officials for talks but received no response; the UN’s humanitarian arm declined to comment when asked about the ban.


Health workers often negotiate access to difficult areas through village elders, and most Afghans are keen to protect their children from a disease which can kill or paralyse. The Taliban’s accusation that vaccinators were working as spies is a worrying new sign of hostility to efforts to wipe out the disease.


But there have for years been fears that the Pakistani Taliban’s opposition to polio vaccination campaigns, which militant leaders have banned at least three times since 2012, could influence Afghan groups.


The CIA’s decision to set up a fake vaccination programme as part of its hunt for Osama bin Laden fuelled militant suspicion of the global project to eradicate polio. The White House has since promised that the US will never again use vaccination programmes as a cover for spying.


Most polio cases in Afghanistan are believed to be the result of infections brought across the Pakistani border, but Afghans are still vulnerable because in some areas only two-thirds of children are immunised.




Afghan Taliban bans polio vaccination teams from southern Helmand

Afghan Taliban bans polio vaccination teams from southern Helmand

AFGHANISTAN-HEALTH-POLIO

An Afghan health worker administers polio vaccine drops to a child. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images




The Afghan Taliban has banned polio vaccination teams from southern Helmand province because it suspects them of spying for the government at a time of heavy clashes with government forces, the insurgent group said in a statement on its website.


The announcement is a worrying development, because although Taliban groups across the border in Pakistan have attacked and killed polio vaccinators for years, their Afghan counterparts have mostly supported, or at least tolerated, international efforts to wipe out the disease.


The last time polio vaccinators were blocked from part of Afghanistan, the insurgent group denied any role and said it supported efforts to stop the disease.


Afghanistan is one of just three countries, along with Pakistan and Nigeria, where polio is still endemic. There has been a rise in cases this year, with seven reported so far compared with just three for the same period of 2013, according to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.


The group said Helmand has been off limits to vaccinators since February, but did not give a reason. The southern province has seen fierce fighting between insurgent and government forces in recent weeks, and the Taliban’s statement was the first indication it had chased out polio eradication teams.


“We have stopped vaccination in Helmand for the moment,” the Taliban said in a statement posted on its website this week. “The vaccinators were also collecting information about the Taliban and Taliban commanders, they were spying.”


The statement said they had asked UN officials for talks but received no response; the UN’s humanitarian arm declined to comment when asked about the ban.


Health workers often negotiate access to difficult areas through village elders, and most Afghans are keen to protect their children from a disease which can kill or paralyse. The Taliban’s accusation that vaccinators were working as spies is a worrying new sign of hostility to efforts to wipe out the disease.


But there have for years been fears that the Pakistani Taliban’s opposition to polio vaccination campaigns, which militant leaders have banned at least three times since 2012, could influence Afghan groups.


The CIA’s decision to set up a fake vaccination programme as part of its hunt for Osama bin Laden fuelled militant suspicion of the global project to eradicate polio. The White House has since promised that the US will never again use vaccination programmes as a cover for spying.


Most polio cases in Afghanistan are believed to be the result of infections brought across the Pakistani border, but Afghans are still vulnerable because in some areas only two-thirds of children are immunised.




Afghan Taliban bans polio vaccination teams from southern Helmand

26 Ocak 2014 Pazar

Half of Afghan kids endure irreversible harm from malnutrition

Afghanistan is raising a stunted generation, whose hobbled development could spell disaster for the country’s feeble economy and undermine the impact of billions of dollars in aid poured into wellness, schooling and other places.


Much more than half of Afghan women and boys endure damage to their minds and bodies that cannot be undone simply because they are poorly fed in the essential first two many years of lifestyle, medical doctors and specialists say. The revelation raises critical queries about the legacy of a lot more than ten many years of western involvement in Afghanistan.


“Right after the age of two many years, stunting is largely irreversible, and has an influence on growth and growth and cognitive function,” says Carrie Morrison from the Globe Meals Programme. “More than the longer term, it can have a quite damaging result on the national economy. Youthful men and women are not able to attain what they ought to be able to attain. Women who marry youthful and are stunted themselves give birth to a tiny infant and the cycle goes on.”


The issue of youngsters who are not receiving enough nutrients from their foods is identified as persistent malnutrition. It afflicts poorer nations throughout the world, but in Afghanistan it is especially widespread and persistent.


A decade following the fall of the Taliban, fifty five% of the country’s young children are stunted simply because of inadequate foods, Afghan government and UN data displays.


The statistic is damning for western powers which have poured billions into Afghanistan to fund improvement and reconstruction. The US alone has invested $ 90bn (£54bn). This kind of funding aimed to transform Afghanistan from an impoverished, unstable nation of largely subsistence farmers into a far more modern day nation, but return on that paying has been lower.


With troops quickly to head residence, the returns have been constrained. Violence is spreading and Afghanistan remains a single of the world’s poorest nations, with lower existence expectancy and bad healthcare for mothers and younger kids.


The malnutrition difficulty is brought on by the standard poverty of these who cannot afford healthful food, as properly as bad hygiene and healthcare, little one marriage, and a world wide web of other issues.


“We have entire households exactly where meals insecurity implies they are all malnourished, but we [also] even have wealthy households that have one particular little one who is sick,” says Alam Mohammad, a 25-12 months-previous medical doctor who swapped the chance of an straightforward city practice to function in Feroz Nakhchair, on the gruelling frontline of a battle for the country’s long term.


Half an hour’s drive down a grime track from the nearest country road, in a valley on the fringes of Taliban territory, he sees dozens of instances a day like Mojabeen, whose leopard-print dress beneath her burqa seems incongruous with her daily life of consistent hardship at 19, she has three youngsters and the household reside in a one particular-area property on a flood plain that is periodically inundated.


Her husband earns $ 2 or $ three a day, if he can discover work, which is not sufficient to feed the tiny family. “My 2nd youngster is living with my mom, as we cannot provide for him,” says Mojabeen, as she waits for her baby to be weighed and examined.


Her young children were at a disadvantage even ahead of they were born because Mojabeen was so starved of nutrients that she could not pass on what they necessary throughout pregnancy. In a district of all around 13,000 men and women, the difficulty is so widespread that a programme set up for around one hundred pregnant and breastfeeding mothers is presently serving more than 4 occasions that quantity.


Nonetheless, it can be tough for charities and the government to emphasis interest or funds on chronic malnutrition when the country is battling a a lot more dramatic type of hunger, which is also less complicated to address: acute malnutrition.


In clinics nationwide tens of thousands of babies and toddlers have seasoned this kind of extreme shortages of calories that they have the protruding bones and distended stomachs familiar from images of famine victims. Acute malnutrition affects more than a single in 4 youngsters in some locations, but it can generally be resolved fairly rapidly with a regular supply of large energy Plumpy’nut feeding paste.


In some methods, persistent malnutrition is more difficult to tackle as the children struggling from it typically don’t display their desperate need to have for help.


“You might see a little one who seems underweight, or brief for their age, but it doesn’t really tell you significantly unless you line them up against a nicely-nourished youngster. But it prevents them growing up to lead a a lot more productive existence,” says Morrison.


But appearances are disastrously deceptive. “It prevents them expanding up for a productive daily life,” she adds.


A lack of iron, which influences three-quarters of Afghan kids, decreases exercise and productivity. In younger kids, it disrupts brain growth with effects such as “stunting, sickliness, poor college attendance, and reduce levels of concentration and memory”. A lack of iodine “is the world’s major result in of preventable mental impairment”, and a lack of vitamin A hobbles the immune system, pushing up death prices among children beneath five.


So extreme is the damage that tackling it by lacing simple meals this kind of as salt and flour with micronutrients has been rated 1 of the most economical ways to do great. “In the worst-impacted nations, the advantages of supplementation with vitamin A and zinc can be up to one hundred instances larger than the charges,” in accordance to a research paper on the influence of providing children “micronutrients” – generally acknowledged in the west as “nutritional vitamins and minerals”.


Just lately, the government launched a five-yr programme to fortify flour employed to make ubiquitous nan flat bread – frequently the only every day food for poor households – oil and other foodstuffs. Gradual progress with women’s schooling, healthcare and hygiene schooling is anticipated to carry slow but important progress.


A recent World Financial institution examine found a direct hyperlink in between sanitation and height: a 5-12 months-previous child in a community exactly where every person employs a toilet is on common far more than 2cm taller than a youngster from one particular exactly where folks defecate in the open.


But poverty is also a pressing issue, in a country in which a third of all citizens do not often know where their subsequent meal will come from. A latest UN study discovered even a minimally healthful diet plan was beyond the reach of the majority of Afghans in some provinces, only one in five could afford balanced meals.


And whilst the government and assist staff try to tackle problems that can get many years to remedy, healthworkers are typically hobbled by a emphasis on much more apparently pressing troubles.


“We do worry about continual malnutrition, but all we can give them is tips,” says Nehmatullah Majidzafa, a nutrition nurse at an Oxfam-supported undertaking in the shadow of the ruined ancient city of Balkh, exactly where most money help feeding the young children in most evident want.


That contains hands-on demonstrations, with nurses chopping onions into a basic pressure cooker prior to including lentils, rice and veggies, and warnings to devote spare money on protein rather than the cookies and cakes that many lavish on their children.


The information does support, because “parents never know a lot about overall health right here”, says Mohammad, the physician in Feroz Nakhchair, but nevertheless it troubles him to see these who arrive past the reach of his assist. “If a youngster comes in soon after as well lengthy with persistent malnutrition, he are not able to completely recover. We can only educate the parents so they take a lot more care it isn’t going to take place with the other youngsters.”


Severe poverty and a harsh climate indicate many Afghans go hungry. One-third of the population do not get adequate food to reside wholesome, lively lives, and an additional third hover close to the borderline of “foods insecurity”, or not understanding the place their following meal will come from. But the meals shortages are notably damaging to youthful kids, who want to develop rapidly.


Worldwide scientific studies display that youngsters who are appropriately fed can earn among a third and a half much more as grownups than people who did not get a proper diet, the World Foods Programme’s Morrison says.


And general malnutrition shaves two%-3% off Afghanistan’s nationwide cash flow each year, the Planet Financial institution says. That is close to half a billion bucks misplaced to an previously really poor country.



Half of Afghan kids endure irreversible harm from malnutrition