Afghan health crises
Both of us are public health professionals and have had the honour of serving in the capacity of health ministers in our countries.
Today, we join our voices to express concerns over the fast-deteriorating health conditions in Afghanistan and the need for immediate remedial actions. Nothing is apolitical, but certain matters must take precedence over politics. Political upheavals, wars, civil strife and natural catastrophes have kept Afghanistan in emergency mode for decades. Resultantly, Afghanistan ranks abysmally on most key health indicators regionally, and in some cases globally.
Covid-19 has redefined the concept of national and global security. With over a quarter of a billion cases and close to five million deaths, the world has learnt of its vulnerability to a virus the hard way. Covid-19 has drawn unprecedented political and financial attention to the health sector. Ironically, an opportunity has opened up in the context of the pandemic to rethink and reset our healthcare systems. How Afghanistan and Pakistan emerge from Covid19 and seize this opportunity is going to determine the future of healthcare in both countries.
However, the condition and prospects of Afghanistan's health sector are complex and grave. While despite the system's inadequacies, Afghanistan managed well during Covid-19's third wave, general health conditions and healthcare services are now fast slipping into an abyss.
In June, Afghanistan saw over 2,000 Covid-19 cases and more than 100 deaths per day, with a high number of very sick patients needing oxygen and intensive care. Despite initial shortages, there was a rapid build-up of testing facilities to conduct over 25,000 PCR tests per day and eventually critical care was provided to those in need. This was an unprecedented system uplift. The issue Afghanistan faces today involves the consistent maintenance and development of this capacity in order to prepare for the next possible wave. Disease surveillance and health information systems need much more work. Afghanistan needs an adequate supply of Covid-19 vaccines. Against all odds, it has been able to vaccinate 7.6 per cent of its population. One major challenge for the new administration is to ensure continuity of this momentum.
The condition and prospects of Afghanistan's health sector are complex and grave.
Afghanistan started witnessing steady health development over the past two decades. Evidence confirms, for example, that whereas in 2002 for every 100,000 live births, 1,600 Afghan mothers died, the maternal mortality rate has come down to 638 (more than a 60pc decrease). Likewise, between 2002 and 2018, the infant mortality rate came down from 257 to 62 (a fourfold decrease); the under-five mortality rate dropped from 161 to 48 (more than a three-fold decrease.) Two decades ago, only 33pc of children were receiving the DPT3 vaccine - a primary indicator of protection from childhood diseases - which increased to 70pc last year.
Bit by bit, health services were improving in
Afghanistan. More than 30,000 health workers have been employed in recent years to operationalise 3,678 health facilities compared to 450 health facilities in 2001. This influx of health workers has given 93pc of the population an opportunity to access health services on foot within two hours; as compared to 9pc access in 2001. However, war-torn Afghanistan continued to be heavily dependent on multilateral and bilateral donors. The World Bank, the European Commission, and USAID have been primarily financing the Sehatmandi programme for primary and secondary healthcare through the Afghanistan Reconstruction Fund managed by the World Bank.
The Taliban takeover has severely endangered these vital gains. The World Bank has frozen its funding of the Sehatmandi programme and most other donors have followed. Hence, 2,400 World Bank-funded health facilities have run out of supplies, essential medicines, fuel and oxygen. Staff salaries have been withheld for the past five months. Before the takeover, around 65,000 caesarean sections were being performed annually in these facilities and 520 major surgeries were conducted on a daily basis - half of them emergency operations. Now, 4,000 Afghan children will be deprived of routine immunisation and 19,000 children denied nutritional services on a daily basis. Family planning, maternal vaccination, anti-tuberculosis interventions and the control and treatment of malaria are other health services affected by the interruption of the Sehatmandi programme.
With only one polio case reported this year in Afghanistan, and in Pakistan, we seem to be on the verge of finally eradicating this disease not only from our countries but also the world. But these conditions may undo progress and quickly lead to a burst of new polio cases - the dream of a polio-free world may not be realised for several years. There are 10 other vaccinepreventable diseases. Restoring routine child immunisation should be given very high priority in Afghanistan.
If these health financing crises are not addressed immediately, Afghanistan's health sector will virtually collapse, jeopardising health gains and healthcare.