2/20/2005
- UN News Article on MFP Iraq Report
BAGHDAD,
2/21/2005 (IRIN) - The situation in Baghdad's hospitals is critical,
particularly in terms of unhygienic and unsafe working conditions,
according to a recent survey by the US-based Medicine For Peace
(MFP) NGO.
The MFP reported
that most hospitals were unclean and unhygienic and
lacked an infection control programme. The sanitation system was
practically non-existent and, according to the survey, as much as
60
percent of toilets were not working.
The survey was
carried out in 90 percent of the capital's hospitals and 60
percent nationwide.
Infective materials
could be seen in open boxes, easy for anyone to be in
direct contact with them, the survey found. Potable water was rarely
seen
in hospitals, with most patient's families bringing water to them.
Dr Youssef Abdul
Kader of Yarmouk Hospital in Baghdad told IRIN that most
hospitals in the capital were running low on ways to control the
spread of
infection and that a disease outbreak could happen at any time.
He also
complained that most health workers did not have gloves or masks
to wear
and had become part of the groups at risk.
"After
the last war the country became open for blood-transmitted diseases
such as HIV and the lack of these essential materials for protection
can
bring unexpected diseases to medical staff. I bring gloves with
me because
the hospital cannot afford them," Kader added.
According to
the MFP study, all hospitals were suffering from a sporadic or persistent
shortage of essential medicines and disposable supplies, including
basics such as detergents, hand washing disinfectants, sterile needles
and gloves, masks, antiseptics and soap.
The survey added
that clinical laboratories and radiology services in the
majority of hospitals were unable to support demand, especially
because of
old and malfunctioning clinical laboratory and imaging equipment,
as well
as poor instructions on how to use it.
Dr Michael Viola,
who directed the MFP study, told IRIN that hospitals in
Iraq were not nearly as good in terms of providing quality care
as they
were before the 1991 Gulf War. The hospitals struggled during the
1990s,
mainly due to the sanctions implemented following Iraq's invasion
of
Kuwait and bad
management by the Baathists, the report said.
According to
Viola, from 1999 hospitals went into a decline. The former
regime stopped putting money into health care at that point.
A key point
in the report is that the "brain drain" of Iraqi physicians
and academics during the 1990s, made worse by the recent violence,
has had
a devastating effect on the performance of hospitals in Baghdad.
"Whether
a similar problem exists all over Iraq is difficult to say. Since
the Ministry of Health (MoH) has not instituted standards of care
for all
of Iraq, I would suspect the problem in this case is for all the
country.
In the past, health care was best in Baghdad," Viola added.
A doctor from
a public hospital in the capital, who preferred not to be
named, told IRIN they had to use the same needles many times for
more than
three patients. "I know that it is something very wrong, but
sometimes you
want to save a life and you don't have any other choice," the
doctor
explained.
Viola noted
that there were three main needs of the health system in the
country: leadership by the MoH to develop, implement and monitor
an
appropriate level of care in hospitals; education of physicians
on best
practices in terms of an infection control programmes; and resources
for
supplies, drugs, equipment and repair of facilities.
MoH officials
told IRIN that the health care system deteriorated during
Saddam Hussein's regime and was compounded by looting during the
2003
conflict, but they had been working hard to repair it, which might
take
longer than expected.
However, the
MFP study team did note a number of improvements since the 2003
war, including an increase in the number of hospital staff and a
30-fold increase in salaries for doctors and nurses, as well as
improvements in security in some areas, but that all these developments
could be nullified by the poor and unsafe working conditions, it
warned.
Dr Viola added
that urgent intervention was required by the government but
that after two wars and years of UN sanctions, it was a good sign
to see
that at least hospitals were still operating in the country.
"Improving
security for hospital staff, particularly physicians, and instituting
professional education programmes with the goal of upgrading the
standard of care delivered in public hospitals is an important step
that should be taken urgently by the government," Viola stressed.
>>
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