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DON'T FORGET OUR PROMISE TO AFGHANIS.


Byline: Nafisa Abdullah Local View

I was born in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. I lived there until I was a young adult, receiving my medical degree from Kabul University Thousands of students are studying at the university in fields of Agriculture, Economics, Pharmacy, Law, Literature, Science, Engineering, and Fine Arts. History
During the reign of the Taliban, faculty members earned only US$40 a month. But today they earn $45 to $50 a month.
. I then had the privilege of becoming the first Afghan woman to study medicine in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , where I currently work and live.

This past April, I decided to return to my war-torn homeland to see the conditions there firsthand.

What I saw saddened me.

Despite promises by the international community to help reconstruct Afghanistan after decades of war and neglect, the country's largest city, Kabul, remains in shambles.

It only gets worse in the countryside.

As a visiting physician and an expatriate, I felt compelled to use my skills during my four-week ``vacation'' to help women and children in need of medical assistance in the city.

I chose to work with female doctors in the department of obstetrics and gynecology obstetrics and gynecology

Medical and surgical specialty concerned with the management of pregnancy and childbirth and with the health of the female reproductive system.
 at the Rabia Balkhi Rabe'a Balkhi (Persian: رابعه بلخی), also called as Rabi'ah bint Kaab Quzdari or Ghozdary  Hospital in downtown Kabul where I could practice my specialty.

This hospital, I was told, had been visited six months earlier by representatives from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979
Health and Human Services, HHS
 who promised that it would become one of the most modern women's and children's medical facilities anywhere.

So on April 21, I was honored to be present when officials from the Afghan Department of Public Health, the U.S. embassy, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and a host of dignitaries came for a ribbon-cutting ceremony and tour of the hospital.

What I saw in the hospital, where I would begin working within two days, however, showed me that ribbon cuttings and visits by dignitaries are not the solution to the health care problems of the Afghan people.

A spruced-up facility for one day does not make the cut in the long run. The quality of the medicine that I was a part of 35 years ago had deteriorated significantly.

The delivery rate for newborns was 55 to 80 per day. There were times when 20 to 30 women were in active labor, some with high risk and complicated pregnancies, giving birth with very little care, some on cold, naked steel delivery room tables - of which there were few. Others, with sad and wizened wiz·ened  
adj.
Withered; wizen.


wizened
Adjective

shrivelled, wrinkled, or dried up with age

Adj. 1.
 faces, lay on the cement floor or with one or two of their countrywomen on a flat cushion, wrapped only in their shawls.

These were the lucky ones.

I say this because the vast majority of Afghan women receive no prenatal care prenatal care,
n the health care provided the mother and fetus before childbirth.
. Also, most deliveries still occur at home because women may be unable to get to a hospital or may not have the permission of a male family member to ``go out.''

As a consequence, the mortality rate for mothers and their infants is unacceptably high by any standard.

What I saw in the operating room operating room
n. Abbr. OR
A room equipped for performing surgical operations.
 was equally disturbing. It was not unusual during a major operation for my scrub nurse scrub nurse
n.
A nurse who assists the surgeon in the operating room.


scrub nurse A nurse–or technician who participates in a sterile surgical operation, prepares sterile supplies and passes them to the surgeon,
 to tell me ``I'm sorry, there are no more sutures.''

Patients coming to this hospital often had to bring sutures, blood and antibiotics for their own surgeries. If the supply of sutures was depleted de·plete  
tr.v. de·plet·ed, de·plet·ing, de·pletes
To decrease the fullness of; use up or empty out.



[Latin d
 in the middle of an operation, the patient's relatives would be sent out to buy more, if they had the money.

Electric power was also a frequent problem. This ``model'' hospital did not even have a backup generator, so surgery sometimes had to be performed by candlelight when the antiquated power grid in Kabul would collapse.

Why should we care about this situation?

In many ways, it is a simple matter of integrity. As part of the war on terrorism Terrorist acts and the threat of Terrorism have occupied the various law enforcement agencies in the U.S. government for many years. The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, as amended by the usa patriot act , Afghanistan was promised much and has received little.

It seems as though this country was lost in the wake of the war in Iraq.

The sorry state of the medical system is just one example of the neglect by the international community that I observed during my tenure. Yes, some small progress has been made but, in my view, it would be a big mistake to let this incremental approach continue, if the world wants a stable and peaceful Afghanistan in the future.

As for the five women who died unnecessarily while I was present, because simple medical protocols and basic precautions were not adhered to by poorly trained staff, the tragic consequence is that the many women and newborns who follow will continue to be in a life-and-death struggle until appropriate aid and education arrives.

Having been there in person, all of what I observed and experienced has motivated me to do my best to bring the world's attention back to this seemingly faraway far·a·way  
adj.
1. Very distant; remote.

2. Abstracted; dreamy: a faraway look.


faraway
Adjective

1. very distant

2.
, but hugely important country.

Anyone who saw the suffering and chaos that I did could do no less.
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Viewpoint
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Geographic Code:9AFGH
Date:Jun 22, 2003
Words:785
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