Yemen: Women, babies affected most by collapsed healthcare system
Istanbul, Turkey - Hospitals and health facilities have become inoperative amid the ongoing internal conflict in Yemen, leading to the loss of lives of pregnant women and babies, according to a UN official.
“In Yemen, less than 50 per cent of hospitals and health facilities are operational, and only one-fifth of these health facilities provide maternal and neonatal care services,” Hicham Nahro, deputy representative of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) in Yemen, told Anadolu.
“Pregnant women cannot access urban maternity hospitals or health centres due to disadvantages such as frequent displacement and living in rural and remote areas,” Nahro said.
Nahro pointed out that families living in rural areas also cannot afford to go to hospitals or health centres due to financial reasons.
“Many Yemeni families cannot afford hospital costs, even transportation expenses to reach urban centres,” he said.
“Some pregnant women in critical condition try to reach hospitals by walking or riding camels for 7-8 hours,” Nahro noted.
“Last year, as UNFPA, we managed to reach nearly three million Yemeni women and girls, but there is still a great need for assistance for a healthy pregnancy process in the country,” he added. “There are 5.5mn women in the country who do not have access to or have very limited access to reproductive health services, including 2.7mn pregnant and lactating women suffering from acute malnutrition,” he warned.
Yemen has fallen into civil war since 2014 when Iran-backed Houthis seized much of the country, including the capital Sanaa, forcing the internationally recognised government to set up an interim capital in the coastal city of Aden.