PARWAN PROVINCE, Afghanistan – Restless kids play peek-a-boo behind their mothers’ blue burqas in the waiting room at Sar-e-Hause Comprehensive Health Centre. Inside the delivery room, a heavily pregnant woman paces back and forth between labor pains. And in a consultation area, a young mother gets breastfeeding advice.
Circulating between all these women is midwife Muzhda Malikzada. Her pace might seem hectic to most, but at least there are no bullets or mortar blasts to dodge anymore, she says. “Life was very dangerous before. We took so many risks to do our work. Now it is much easier and better for everyone.”
“Yes, we had fireworks every day,” she recalls with a wry smile. “At that time, people needed our help and someone had to take these risks.”
But now, the Afghan government, World Bank and its partners are working hard to create a proper health care system for the country, says Muzhda. “I feel we are finally on the right path,” she says. “I just pray that we can keep up this progress.”
The government of Afghanistan and Ministry of Public Health are ensuring access to basic health and essential hospital services by having a clear policy and strategy, and implementing it effectively using groundbreaking approaches. They have developed a good working collaboration with partners to ensure adequate financing to deliver a basic package of health services.
This progress is assisted by SHARP, a project supported by the World Bank, Afghanistan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF), Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF) and a multi-donor trust fund. Launched in 2008, the Strengthening Health Activities for the Rural Poor Project is striving to improve the health and nutrition of all Afghans, but particularly women, children, and people in underserved areas.
SHARP finances a basic package of health services in 11 provinces. It also supports stewardship functions of government including monitoring and evaluation of primary health care facilities and hospitals, and other improvements. The project works in tandem and finances the Afghan government’s health sector policy and strategy.
More recently, the World Bank approved a $100 million grant from the International Development Association (IDA) to help the government of Afghanistan expand the scope, quality and coverage of basic health and essential hospital services in Afghanistan. The Afghanistan System Enhancement for Health Action in Transition (SEHAT) Program will cover both rural and urban areas in 22 of the country’s 34 provinces. It will also strengthen the national health system and build the capacity of the Ministry of Public Health to effectively perform its stewardship functions at the central and provincial levels.
Improved access to health care
Before 2003, medical care was limited and erratic in the country. Many non-governmental organizations (NGOs) filled the gaps in health services, but efforts were uncoordinated nationwide.
Now, with the government’s health strategy, health centers like Sar-e-Hause are staffed by a team of medical and support staff including doctors, midwives, and laboratory technicians. The health centers provide preventive and curative services including outpatient consultations, vaccinations, maternal and child health services, child delivery assistance, tuberculosis detection, counseling and health education, and laboratory services.
The Sar-e-Hause center currently serves about 18,700 people and is located in the village of Tajikan.
Malikzada risked her life to tend to new mothers caught in the conflict. “Of course, it was worth it,” she says today, lifting a wriggling baby from his mother. “How could we refuse these little ones?”
The effective implementation of the government’s health policy has resulted in the number of health clinics growing nationwide from a total of just 496 in 2003 to more than 2,000 today. In Parwan alone, the number of clinics has almost tripled from a total of 24 to 67, says Mohammad Qassim Saidi, the province’s director of health.
“People here had very little access to medical care a decade ago, but the facilities have increased so that there is primary health care for at least 95 per cent of our population in Parwan,” Saidi says.