1 / 26

USAID Afghanistan Health Program

USAID Afghanistan Health Program. Improving the health of women of reproductive age and children under 5 years old, especially in rural areas. Health Care in Afghanistan: An overview. Grim health indicators : Maternal mortality: 1,600 per 100,000 live births (US: 8)

udell
Télécharger la présentation

USAID Afghanistan Health Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. USAID Afghanistan Health Program Improving the health of women of reproductive age and children under 5 years old, especially in rural areas

  2. Health Care in Afghanistan: An overview • Grim health indicators: • Maternal mortality: 1,600 per 100,000 live births (US: 8) • Infant mortality: 165 per 1,000 (US: 7) • Child mortality: 257 per 1,000, 25% die before age 5 (US: 0.35) • Most deaths are from easily preventable diseases & conditions • 60% of child mortality is due to CDD, ARI & vaccine preventable diseases • 40% of population has no access to health services • Human resources: Nearly 40% of Basic Primary Health Service facilities have no female health worker • Limited management & service delivery capacity of MOH USAID program goal: reduce maternal mortality, infant mortality, and child mortality.

  3. Provinces for grants & other support Underserved districts in highlighted provinces were listed in the RFA

  4. Program components • Physical infrastructure • Service delivery • Training & capacity building • Use of services • Improved health status • Economic development

  5. Limitations & constraints • Security, especially in south & southeast, resulting in: • Difficulty in establishing offices & posting staff • Additional costs & delays • Lack of available human resources, especially female service providers in rural areas • Lack of resources in the MOH for the most basic implementation • Diversion of BPHS grants budget to cover areas left vulnerable due to “donor shift,” and delays and shortages of funds by other donors

  6. >2 OHDACA 1-2 OHDACA 0 OHDACA 16 11 BHC 5 CHC 15 9 BHC 6 CHC 13 7 BHC 6 CHC 1 Model clinic 13 11 BHC 2 CHC Health Clinic Construction / Renovation 80 OHDACA renovations 13 8 BHC 5 CHC Current USAID Project 7 4 BHC 3 CHC

  7. Clinic construction &rehabilitation MOH using an equitable approach with a goal of 1 clinic per 30,000 population working towards 1 clinic per 20,000 population

  8. Basic Package of Health Services • Maternal and Newborn Health • Child Health and Immunization • Public Nutrition • Communicable Disease • Supply of Essential Drugs • Disability* • Mental Health* * Not currently implemented • Helps to prioritize among many health problems (public health) • Guides the allocation of scarce human and financial resources to address priority problems (including for NGOs and donors) • Provides direction for the rehabilitation of the health care system (start with primary care)

  9. Service delivery • Target was the 62 underserved districts out of 154 total districts. • Funding is also supporting services in 53 other districts to cover for loss of other donors’ funding. • USAID funding also used to cover WB & EC delays/funding shortages

  10. Districts covered by REACH grants

  11. Rural Population To Be Covered by Grants in REACH Priority Provinces (population in millions)

  12. Training & capacity building • Building training capacity: national strategy, curriculum, training centers, clinical training sites • Females are 50% target for all provider training • Learning for Lifeliteracy program will increase pool of females eligible to become midwives or CHWs • Strengthened provincial presence andMOH capacity to improve policy & govern sector

  13. Health education & healthy products • Key Achievements • Prevention of diarrheal disease through national radio campaign - 80 broadcasts on local radio stations • Chlorin – Locally produced sodium hypochlorite solution To date 42,000 bottles sold that provide 42 million liters of safe drinking water • Launched Number One condom and sold 100,000 in Dec 2003 • Planned • 1.5 million condoms, 150,000 oral, & 30,000 vials of injectables contraceptives procured & will be on the market by April 2004 • Social marketing campaign to emphasize birth spacing • Malaria prevention through social marketing and targeted distribution of insecticide treated bed nets • Improved skills of retail pharmacists & drug dispensers

  14. Principles & approaches • Full coordination with Ministry of Health • Collaboration with and leveraging of other donors • Central and provincial level focus • Coordination with USG health group

  15. Accelerated Program • Additional construction • Increase training & capacity building activities • Expanded service delivery through grants • Add support to hospitals

  16. (DRAFT) Afghanistan Maternal Health Initiative Saving 120,000 lives January 29, 2004

  17. Maternal Death Risk in Afghanistan • Risk of maternal death is one of the highest in the world--100 TIMES THAT OF U.S. • Risk of maternal death in Badakshan of 6500-- HIGHEST EVER RECORDED IN HUMAN HISTORY

  18. Badakshan Province has the highest maternal mortality ever recorded Badakshan Province Maternal Mortality Ratio(# deaths/100,000 live births) USA 8 Afghanistan 1,600 – 2,200 Badakshan 6,500 (CDC/UNICEF/USAID Study, 2002)

  19. The Current Situation Fawzia*, 16, illiterate, married at 13, no prenatal care, malnourished delivers at home with only her illiterate mother-in-law in attendance. She hemorrhages and is nine days donkey ride away from skilled care. She dies eight hours after the birth leaving a newborn and two year old daughter. The newborn dies after several days and the girl dies six months later. * An indicative person representative of thousands of Afghan women.

  20. USG Initiative to Save Mothers’ Lives • Maternal deaths are preventable • We know what works • USG comprehensive program • Basic health services • Roads • Literacy training • Activities to improve the role of women • There are no quick solutions • It takes years of commitment and hard work to bring death rates down

  21. 100,000 lives saved 35,000 mothers 65,000 newborns 200,000 maternal disabilities due to child birth reduced/avoided Assuming security and continuing commitment Expected Results Over 10 Years

  22. Expanded Maternal Health Initiative:(Red type signifies expanded elements of existing initiative) • Construct and renovate rural clinics • Provide basic health services in rural areas and launch program to prevent post-partum hemorrhage—the biggest killer • Train midwives • Link health and education • Incorporate health messages into school curricula and accelerated learning classes for girls • Expand literacy programs to prepare women for entry into community health worker training • Build secondary and tertiary roads that link communities to clinics • Improve hospital quality (HHS) in provincial hospitals • Provide health products through private sector channels and solicit international private sector resources • Strengthen administrative capacity for health planning • Establish village women’s centers and strengthen newly-elected Women’s Community Development Councils that facilitate women’s access to health information & services

  23. 120,000 KEY Expanded Program 100,000 Current Program 2013 2004 Years Cumulative Lives Saved With Current and Expanded Program

  24. With USG-Supported Maternal Health Program Sohaila*, 19, cousin of Fawzia, married at 18, gets iron and folate tablets, tetanus toxoid immunizations and other prenatal care at the newly-built health center from a community healthcare worker. Following delivery at home, she hemorrhages. Her husband who has had community health education transports her on the upgraded feeder road to the community midwife who provides life-saving care to stop the bleeding. She survives. Her newborn daughter survives and enrolls in school at the age of five. * An indicative person representative of what the program is striving toward.

  25. Challenges • Lack of security in countryside • Cultural, geographic isolation of women • Need for continuing commitment and support

More Related