What has the health situation looked like in Herat since the Taliban took over?
The healthcare system is at risk of collapse in the whole country, while the needs are huge. This is also reflected in what we observe in Herat. Access to care was a major issue in Afghanistan well before the Taliban takeover, but today the situation has further degraded, as most of the international aid has been suspended. This includes the World Bank funding of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) basic and essential care programmes covering Herat province.
Health facilities in the area are either closing or have reduced to providing minimum services with whatever residual resources are available. We have no visibility on what is going to happen to these facilities. People are jobless and are poor; they cannot afford private care, while some of the humanitarian organisations previously working in the area are yet to resume their activities in full.
Herat Regional Hospital, where we run an in-patient therapeutic feeding centre (ITFC), has lost some of its key staff; the director and some of its most senior medical personnel left the country just before the fall of the city to the Taliban. The result has been a lack of governance in the hospital and many administrative challenges.
Outside of the MSF-run ITFC, salaries have not been paid for five months. There are not enough medical supplies, no money to pay maintenance. Meanwhile, wards are full of patients. In a nutshell, needs are everywhere, and the system is failing.
Many, including the United Nations, indicated that malnutrition is a major crisis in the country. What are we seeing through our nutrition programme?
Our indicators show that malnutrition is indeed a major issue. I’d probably define it as a looming crisis, which had started well before the recent events. Between May and September 2021, we observed nearly a 40 per cent increase in the number of admissions to our ITFC programme, compared to the same months in 2020.
The malnutrition peak this year exceeded its usual levels, in terms of both intensity and duration: we expected a decrease in September, whereas we actually observed a further increase in the number of cases.
Lately, the situation has become even worse. Our ITFC has been extremely busy, with over 60 new admissions each week and the number of hospitalised patients reaching more than double our maximum capacity. This prompted the decision to increase the number of beds.
Many of our patients and their families travel more than 15 kilometres to seek medical care, while some come from as far away as Badghis, Ghor and Farah provinces, well over 100 kilometres away.
There are probably several reasons for the increase of malnutrition in the area, most likely indicative of the broader situation in Afghanistan: a lack of functioning health facilities in the area; the economic downturn (with up to 30 per cent inflation rate for food items); the lack of liquidity and closing of banks; and a drought that is expected to persist throughout 2021.
Recent attacks in Kunduz and Kandahar are a shocking reminder that insecurity is still a concern. Are we worried for the safety of our teams in the area?
First and foremost, we endeavour to let the community know that we are there to provide medical assistance and not to take sides in any conflict. Our main assets are our impartiality and the quality of the services we provide, in respect of the local culture.
Having said that, the attacks in Kunduz and Kandahar were indeed shocking. They were claimed by the Islamic State in Khorasan Province (ISK), which has a history of targeting groups like Shia and Hazaras (large communities of both live in Herat), and, generally speaking, harmless civilians in the country.
This threat may possibly have been exacerbated by the recent phase of instability. We do our best to monitor the context and minimise the risk of being caught in an attack, while knowing that there is no way to completely eliminate such risk. This actually applies to anybody in Afghanistan, including in Herat.