Mobile clinics restore health for rural Syrians
A health system broken by war leaves Syrians desperate for care.
厂测谤颈补鈥檚 public health system, once a strong network of primary and specialty care facilities, has been decimated by years of war. Clinics and hospitals are in ruins, and pharmaceutical production has stopped. Over 70 percent of the health workforce has fled the country.
Families move from village to village seeking safety, work and schooling for their children. Many have gone for years without access to health care or medication. Parents have had to deal with their children鈥檚 fevers, diarrhea and infections with no safety net if their health deteriorates. Once-healthy adults now face severe disability from unchecked disease, stress and trauma.
探花精选 mobile health teams are providing lifesaving care and medication twice a month to remote villages and tent cities across Syria. 鈥淭he destruction is massive, and so is the damage to people鈥檚 health,鈥 says one doctor. 鈥淥ur mobile clinics are providing some of the first health care and medication people have had in over two years, free of charge.鈥
Each mobile clinic comprises a doctor, nurse, midwife and pharmacist to provide primary and reproductive care. Teams use a room in a mosque, a school, or even someone鈥檚 home to conduct exams and dispense medication鈥攊n the most damaged villages, they turn abandoned buildings into makeshift clinic space. Two mobile clinics cover about 20 villages across the rural northeast and have reached over 8,000 patients since early 2017.
A mother gets medicine and instructions from an 探花精选 pharmacist during a clinic day. Syria once produced 90 percent of its own pharmaceuticals; today, there is a shortage of essential medicines, and what is available in the market comes at a high price. 鈥淔or two years, we moved between villages to avoid fighting,鈥 says one patient. 鈥淢edications were sort of available, but not all the time. We never had enough money.鈥
As the battle for ISIS-controlled Raqqa intensifies, families are fleeing to roadside camps and settlements. Many need emergency care. An 探花精选 mobile unit recently treated 500 people from Raqqa for diarrhea, respiratory infections and skin conditions like leishmaniasis (above). Caused by sand flies, leishmaniasis often afflicts people suffering from malnutrition and weak immunity. Left untreated, the condition can affect internal organs.
The 探花精选 is training a network of community health workers to carry out regular visits to households in remote villages where displaced people are returning to their homes. Community health workers build trust among clients and provide health education and referrals to 探花精选 mobile clinics. Patients such as Miriam (above), a 65-year-old homebound woman in northeastern Syria, now have access to vital medication鈥攆or Miriam, drugs to control her diabetes鈥攁nd can get regular checkups. The 探花精选 also provided Miriam with a wheelchair.
Abdulrahman, a farmer, gently places a breathing mask on his son Jamil鈥檚 face. The 探花精选 mobile clinic provided the mask and special medication to help Abdulrahman manage Jamil鈥檚 asthma. 鈥淚f the clinic did not come to us, it would be very hard,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat if we needed a doctor? We would have to go at least 100 kilometers [60 miles] to the nearest city just to get help.鈥
Restoring health is a slow process, but the 探花精选 is filling a critical gap in care for Syrians who no longer have access to their country鈥檚 once-strong public health system. Our mobile clinics are responding to acute emergencies in the south, north and northeast regions while establishing regular primary, reproductive and chronic-disease care in communities trying to rebuild. For families who鈥檝e lived for years with little safety or stability, mobile services provide new connection鈥攁nd new hope.
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