One mobile health clinic for nine villages
“We had lost our hope for her life. We thought Safia will not live long,” says 34-year-old Najmudin.
Because food on the table was not sufficient, his wife was staying hungry and could not produce enough milk to breastfeed her seven-month-old daughter, Safia. She is the fourth child of the family and was severely malnourished. Najmudin and his wife already lost one of their children because of malnutrition. Seeing how week Safia was the family had lost their hope for her life as well.
“Safia was very weak and could not move a lot. She was also not able to drink milk properly and we would feed her through feeding tube,” says Najmudin.
Najmudin is a farmer in Ziaudul village of Badghis Province and the breadwinner of his eight-member family. Unfortunately, he does not have his own plot of land and has to work for others. He works hard and does long hours but the income that he makes is not enough for his family, “I can hardly provide food for my children,” he says.
On one hand, lack of food and on the other hand, lack of access to healthcare services, caused Safia and hundreds of other children to be malnourished in Ziaudul and neighboring villages. “It takes us around four hours to take our sick family member to a doctor because we do not have any clinic and even not a drugstore in these villages,” complains Najmudin.
Eight more villages are located around Ziaudul Village with the population of more than 8,000 people. None of these villages have any clinic. People of these villages have to drive a long way to reach a clinic. Many malnourished children died because of lack of access to healthcare centres. Maternal and infant mortality rate is very high in these villages. This can be prevented.
124,800 premature births were reported in the country, around 13,700 of these babies have died since the beginning of 2022[1]. WFP (World Food Program) has also reported that 4.7 million of children, pregnant and lactating women are at risk of acute malnutrition and 1.1 million children are acutely malnourished.
Realising the needs of these villages to urgently access healthcare services, World Vision Afghanistan, under R3 (Recovery, Resilience and Reintegration) project supported by FCDO (Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office – GOV.UK) and World Vision UK, established a mobile health clinic there, in March 2020, to serve the vulnerable people. This team visits one village each day and provides them with health services as well as medication.
“Before the establishment of this clinic here, Paracetamol – usually expired – was the only treatment for any sickness because we did not have access to other medicine. After this team of doctors came here, the mortality rate of malnourished children as well as maternal and infant mortality rate have decreased in our villages considerably,” says Abdulrahman, the head of Ziaudul Village.
When Najmudin heard about the centre, he immediately brought Safia to be treated. “She was very weak and could not move much. She was even struggling to drink milk. During our first visit the doctors gave her serum and told us to bring her again. Then they gave us nutrition packages and some medicine. After four visits to this clinic, her health has improved noticeably and now she makes a lot of movements; even sometimes she tries to sit on her own,” he explains with a hopeful smile.
The people of these villages dream for a permanent and equipped clinic for their children and families. “People are very grateful and satisfied with this mobile health team. It has solved 70 percent of our health-related problems and is very helpful. This is still not enough to meet all the needs of people,” explains Abdulrahman.
[1] https://reliefweb.int/report/afghanistan/save-children-s-response-afghanistan-march-update