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Healthcare in Afghanistan is crumbling, aid groups warn

AFGHANISTAN — The healthcare system in Afghanistan is teetering on the edge of collapse, endangering the lives of millions and compounding a deepening humanitarian crisis, public health experts warn.

Dr Wahid Majrooh, the health minister of the ousted government, tours a Covid-19 ward in the Afghan Japan Communicable Disease Hospital in Kabul on Sept 1, 2021. After the Taliban’s takeover, international donors withdrew funds that hospitals and clinics depended on and now a fourth wave of Covid-19 looms.

Dr Wahid Majrooh, the health minister of the ousted government, tours a Covid-19 ward in the Afghan Japan Communicable Disease Hospital in Kabul on Sept 1, 2021. After the Taliban’s takeover, international donors withdrew funds that hospitals and clinics depended on and now a fourth wave of Covid-19 looms.

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AFGHANISTAN — The healthcare system in Afghanistan is teetering on the edge of collapse, endangering the lives of millions and compounding a deepening humanitarian crisis, public health experts warn.

The country’s healthcare has been propped up by aid from international donors.

But after the Taliban seized power, the World Bank and other organisations froze US$600 million (S$805 million) in healthcare aid.

The Biden administration in the United States, too, is struggling with how to dispense donor money to a country now being run by several senior Taliban leaders whom the US has designated to be terrorists.

If World Bank funding is not restored quickly, an exodus of healthcare workers may result.

Many have remained on the job despite significant personal risks; already some have not been paid for months.

Along with the loss of supplies, the cutoff would effectively end health care services in 31 of the nation’s 34 provinces, humanitarian groups say.

Afghanistan is already on the brink of universal poverty, according to a United Nations report on Thursday (Sept 9), and only its richest citizens will be able to afford healthcare.

Assuming that healthcare coverage is cut by half because of the funding loss, deaths among women and children will increase by at least 33 per cent over the next year — nearly 2,000 women and more than 26,000 children per year — according to one analysis.

“There have been massive improvements in many metrics of health, like maternal mortality, tuberculosis and malaria,” said Mr Peter Sands, executive director of the Global Fund, an advocacy group that funds campaigns against the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), malaria and tuberculosis.

“There’s a real question as to how those are sustained, and what a tragedy it would be if that was reversed.”

In recent years, Afghanistan had made big strides in reducing maternal and child deaths by more than 50 per cent and increasing life expectancy for men and women by 10 years.

Even so, most Afghans have had access to only rudimentary health care. The loss of humanitarian aid and the looming fourth wave of the coronavirus could devastate the nation.

“We are losing personnel. We are losing lives and the morale and momentum we had,” said Dr Wahid Majrooh, who was health minister under the previous government and has stayed on.

“The crisis is very, very extensive.”

Afghanistan emerged from a third wave of virus infections just a few weeks ago, but it is already seeing a small uptick in cases, this time of the highly contagious Delta variant.

Only 5 per cent of the population has received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine.

“It’s terrible timing that this would happen when right now we’re faced with a situation where humanitarian needs are escalating,” said Dr Richard Brennan, the regional emergency director for the World Health Organization’s Eastern Mediterranean region.

Cesarean sections; immunizations for polio, tuberculosis, tetanus and measles; diagnoses and treatment of tuberculosis, malaria and HIV; childhood nutrition; surgeries and routine health services, including family planning — all are at risk. The loss in aid is also constricting supply chains for medicines, oxygen and food for hospitals.

Roughly two-thirds of the country’s health facilities are part of Sehatmandi, a three-year, US$600 million project administered by the World Bank and funded by the US Agency for International Development, the European Union, the World Bank and others.

Because funds were put in effect through the Afghanistan Ministry of Public Health, the donors withdrew their support after the Taliban’s ouster of the previous administration.

Dr Majrooh, who studied global health policy at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said he appreciated the precarious situation of donor organizations but argued that the health of the population should supersede political considerations.

Dr Majrooh and humanitarian aid experts accused the funding organizations of abandoning Afghans when they most needed help.

“I’m so surprised that at the time where they are the most needed and where they can have the highest impact ever — it is at that time they have decided to pull out,” said Professor Karl Blanchet, an expert in humanitarian studies at the University of Geneva who has worked closely with the Afghan Health Ministry.

But others noted that the World Bank is hamstrung by limits set by its shareholders, and it had no choice but to withdraw financial support when similar upheavals unfolded in Yemen and Myanmar.

“They have rules and regulations that don’t allow them to contribute funding to a government run by the Taliban,” Dr Brennan said. “So they’ve got to find an alternate funding mechanism to channel those funds to ensure those health facilities continue to operate.”

The Sehatmandi program contracts out the delivery of health services to more than 30 nongovernmental organisations.

On Aug 31, a week after the funding pause, an alliance of some of the NGOs warned that, absent of immediate solutions, the organizations could not continue their work after Sept 5.

Without money for salaries or supplies, “we will be unable to offer our commitment for the continuation of services,” the organisations said in a letter to Dr Majrooh.

They urged the new regime to “take over all health facilities effective Sept 10.”

Dr Majrooh said that he had communicated the urgency and scale of the crisis to Taliban leaders but that no plan had yet materialized for assuming control of the country’s health care system.

The NGOs also plan to appeal directly to the World Bank and other donors to resume support. But a sustainable solution may take time.

In the short term, the WHO plans to spend US$66 million to keep 538 health care facilities afloat through the end of the year, Dr Brennan said.

In the meantime, representatives from the World Bank and global health organisations are working closely to come up with alternative funding mechanisms, according to several people familiar with the discussions.

“We are deeply concerned about the situation in Afghanistan and the impact on the country’s development prospects, especially for women,” said Mr David Theis, a spokesperson for the World Bank.

“We will continue to consult closely with the international community and development partners.” THE NEW YORK TIMES

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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