Afghan hospital wards fill with children suffering from pneumonia
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[January 05, 2023]
By Charlotte Greenfield and Mohammad Yunus Yawar
KABUL (Reuters) - In a bitterly cold bedroom at the start of winter in
Kabul, 22-year Maryam sat with her baby son bundled up in a red jumper
as he coughed days after being discharged for the third time from a
hospital ward for suspected pneumonia.
Every time 10-month old Rahmat's parents bring him home from the
crowded, but warmer hospital, they say he gets sick again. The parents
said they spend whatever they can from their shrinking income to trying
to heat the room, which drops below freezing at night.
"I am scared, it is only the beginning of winter, what is going to
happen?" said Maryam, saying the family could only buy coal in small
quantities and had to cut back on food to afford even that after her
husband lost his construction job.
The family is among many in Afghanistan unable to afford adequate
heating, often having to choose between food and fuel as an economic
crisis grips the country.
Doctors and aid workers say thousands of children are being admitted to
hospital with pneumonia and other respiratory diseases caused by the
cold and malnutrition.
The crisis, aid agencies say, is likely to get worse. A ban on female
NGO workers has led to over 180 international organisations suspending
operations in the crucial winter months, saying they are unable to
operate in the conservative country without female staff to reach out to
women and children.
Even before that, more than half the population was reliant on
humanitarian aid after the economic shock precipitated by the 2021
Taliban takeover caused Afghanistan's GDP to shrink by 20% last year.
Afghanistan has been hit by a cut in development spending by foreign
governments, an enforcement of Western sanctions and the freezing of the
country's central bank assets that has severely hampered the banking
system.
"Our patients have increased compared to the past, the main reason is
the economy," said Mohammad Arif Hassanzai, head of internal medicine at
Indira Gandhi Children's Hospital in Kabul.
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A doctor visits patients in a hospital
following an increase in the number of pneumonia cases in Kabul,
Afghanistan, December 17, 2022. REUTERS/Ali Khara
Hospital figures showed more than
6,700 children were admitted in November for pneumonia, coughs,
asthma and other respiratory conditions, compared to around 3,700
the same month the previous year.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which supports
several hospitals in Afghanistan, said even before the winter
months, it had seen a 50% increase of children under five admitted
for pneumonia in 2022 compared to the previous year.
"People have been dying of pneumonia this year, including children,"
said Lucien Christen, ICRC's spokesperson in Kabul, adding that
malnutrition was contributing to children's weakened immune systems.
Aid workers said pollution had also worsened this year as more
people burned garbage and plastic for heat.
In a ward dedicated to pneumonia patients at the hospital, babies
lay two or three to a bed, with worried parents and a handful of
stretched medical staff overseeing them. Some mothers held tiny
oxygen masks to infants' faces, while fathers crammed the corridors
outside.
Suddenly a clamour broke out. A one-month old baby, Mohammad,
stopped breathing and his lips were turning blue. His panic-stricken
uncle, holding the child in a green blanket, was directed to a
specialized emergency unit two floors below. He dashed downstairs,
as the baby's mother ran behind in tears.
In the high dependency unit, Mohammad was connected to an oxygen
tube via his nose. The doctor said he was in critical condition and
would take five days to stabilise.
His mother remained at the baby's bedside. Her husband had lost his
job and they could not afford heating, she said. Watching her son
stop breathing, she said, "it felt like my own heart had stopped."
(Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield and Mohammad Yunus Yawar in
Kabul; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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