Scroll

Pakistan: Six months at Peshawar’s neonatal unit

12 Feb 2015
Other
Related Countries
Pakistan
Share
Print:

From July to December 2014, Dr Yasmine Ley led the neonatal unit at Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors without Borders’ (MSF) obstetrics and gynaecology hospital in Peshawar, northern Pakistan. The following is a look back at her six-month mission.

“Her father hadn’t whispered Allah’s name at her birth*. He did it on the 25th day, when we were absolutely sure she would live, without any long-term repercussions. It was a big moment for all of us." Dr Yasmine Ley speaks about this unforgettable case.

In her soft, precise manner, she recounts the story of Irfan’s baby**. "When the mother came in, she must have been in her 29th week of pregnancy. At birth, the infant didn’t even weigh one kilo. She was the smallest premature baby I’d ever seen.”

The medical team swiftly organised the best care treatment for the infant. "We did a blood transfusion and kept her warm." Fortunately, the baby responded well.

“She wanted to live," Yasmine explains. But she wasn't out of the woods yet.

A difficult time

“After two weeks she started to suffer from apnoea. So I spent a whole afternoon at her bedside, waking her up each time she stopped breathing.

It was a difficult time for her family and for us.” The mother, who had other children at home, remained at her baby’s side in the maternity unit for two months.

On a cold and sunny day in November, Irfan was able to take his wife home with their daughter, whose weight had bulked up to 1.6 kilos.

Her dad whispered the name of Allah in her ear and gave her a name.

Thousands of premature infants each year

Every year in Pakistan thousands of infants are born very premature and die due to lack of appropriate care or lack of medical facilities available to the family. In more remote regions, mothers are sometimes forced to walk several hours to reach a health centre. Winter conditions make matters even worse.

Serious complications also arise after oxytocin is administered, a hormone used to stimulate contractions of the uterus and quicken labour which can be mixed with diezapam, an anxiolytic, to relax women giving birth. The problem is that it literally stops newborns from breathing.

“After birth we end up admitting infants who have already been in respiratory distress for several hours. Owing to a lack of oxygen, they suffer from irreversible sequelae and many don’t survive,” Yasmine explains. 

First MSF mission

"It was my first mission with MSF and that was the most difficult reality to live with. As medical personnel, we are there to provide care and save lives, not lose them. Fortunately we have a fantastic team. Four doctors, eight nurses and eight midwives rotate around the clock to give patients bedside care."

MSF's priorities are to place mothers and at-risk newborns under continuous observation during the 24 hours following delivery and ensure impeccable hygiene. “Through our rigorous approach and methods, we have saved lots of lives," Yasmine tells us.

Innovation has also come into play. In some cases, MSF has authorised fathers to visit the women's hospital, the effect of which is fewer women leaving the premise against medical advice.

Multiple births

"In Pakistan, not only do women have lots of children, seven or eight for some, but in addition to problems with premature births, there are often multiple births too. We saw three sets of triplets born in one month, all delivered naturally.”

“Unfortunately, we had one woman whose infants we were unable to save. They must have been around 30 weeks, they were too tiny, their lungs not properly formed," Yasmine describes. Due to poor medical records and care given during pregnancy the medical teams do not always know the exact age of mothers or newborns.

This is particularly the case for people living in the country's tribal areas. Many patients are referred by MSF's hospital in Hangu, located two or three hours away by road, which does not have a neonatal care unit.

"Happy to be a parent"

“One day, a woman gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl each weighing in at barely a kilo,” Yasmine recounts.

“The husband, she was his fifth wife, only had daughters. And it was wonderful, each time he visited, to see him tenderly holding his daughter in one arm and his son in the other. He would sit there, next to his wife, simply happy to be a parent. It was a beautiful picture.”

*The custom is for the father or a respected member of the local community to whisper the azan in the baby’s right ear. This prayer includes the name of Allah, the Creator of the universe, and is followed by the declaration of faith: There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.

**Irfan is the father’s name.

MSF in Peshawar

MSF has managed an obstetrics and gynaecology with 30 beds in Peshawar since May 2011. The neonatal unit now has 15 beds to admit newborns with serious medical complications. The care provided by MSF is totally free.

While there are numerous private maternity hospitals in the district of Peshawar, specialised obstetrics units are very difficult to access for the most vulnerable women (refugees, displaced, destitute) or women from FATA (Federally Administered Tribal Areas), as prohibitively expensive or poor quality when based in public facilities.

In 2013, 374 newborns and 3,717 women were admitted to MSF's Peshawar hospital, 40 percent of whom presented complications related to pregnancy. Each week, the team helped deliver an average of 62 babies (double the 2012 figure), including 10 by caesarean.

Learn more about MSF's work in Pakistan