Health infrastructure a casualty of war on terror within Pakistan ================================================================= * Ashfaq Yusufzai * © 2008 Canadian Medical Association Arguing that the health infrastructure in the Federally Administered Tribal Area of Pakistan has been one of the biggest casualties of the “war on terror,” the nation's medical association is asking the international medical community to join them in decrying the targetting of health facilities by the United States and Pakistani forces. “It is an inhuman act on the part of the US and Pakistani forces to target hospitals and deprive the patients of the healthcare facilities. We demand an immediate halt to the dropping of bombs on hospitals,” says Dr. Abdul Qadir, president of the Pakistan Doctors' Association. Since the beginning of the US-led war against terrorism in Pakistan in 2005, there have been attacks on several health facilities in the Federally Administered Tribal Area, which comprises 7 tribal agencies and 6 frontier regions that are collectively bordered on the west by Afghanistan, and on the south and east by Pakistan's Balochistan and North-West Frontier provinces, as well as the Indian state of Punjab. The Tribal Area is nominally controlled by the central government of Pakistan and comprised primarily of Pashtun tribes. In the aftermath of the war in Afghanistan, launched by the US and the United Kingdom with the stated purpose of removing the Taliban regime which had provided safe harbor to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, the remnants of the former Kabul government and its supporters took refuge in the Tribal Area. In its bid to flush out members of the Taliban, the US has been attacking the Tribal Area, causing unrest among its 3.6 million residents and a lengthy parade of medical casualties. In September 2006, surgeon Mir Wali Shah and 3 vaccinators were killed by US missile fire over a Tribal Area hospital. Qadir says many doctors are reluctant to be in the Tribal Area's health facilities and as a consequence, many have taken long leaves of absence or sought transfers to safer facilities. The Tribal Area, Qadir says, had a good health-delivery network before 2005 but now is so debilitated that even patients needing minor procedures are brought to Peshawar (the capital of the North-West Frontier Province) for treatment. Typical is Wajid Khan, who brought his brother Sajid, to the Khyber Teacher Hospital in Peshawar for an appendectomy. “We live very close to the agency headquarters hospital, in Miramshah, North Waziristan Agency, but due to the nonavailability of doctors and staff, we brought our brother here,” he says. Others worry about the strain of added travel. “We had a full-fledged government hospital in Bajaur Agency. But we transported our mother to Peshawar because of the nonavailability of a specialist there,” says Gul Khan, claiming to have paid 1000 rupees (US$16) for a 3-hour taxi ride to transport his mother, who was suffering from hypertension, from the town of Bajaur to Peshawar. Dr. Zubair Khan, director of Health Services in the Federally Administered Tribal Area, says that since 2002, the number of admissions in hospital and out patient departments has declined dramatically. Medical Officer Dr. Amjad Ali adds that “we saw only 50 000 patients in 2006. There were 200 000 or more patients before the ‚war on terror'.” The number of surgeries dropped to 5315 in 2006 from 32 000 in 2001. ![Figure1](http://www.cmaj.ca/https://www.cmaj.ca/content/cmaj/179/9/889/F1.medium.gif) [Figure1](http://www.cmaj.ca/content/179/9/889/F1) A resident of the North Waziristan town of Bannu, seen through a hole in a sheet at his bedside, is treated for injuries received as a result of rockets fired by militants. Image by: Reuters / Andrees Latif Physicians, meanwhile, have joined the exodus. Two years ago, Dr. Bakht Sarwar, 48, was critically injured when his hospital in Miramshah was hit by a missile. He refused to return to work and is on indefinite leave in Peshawar. In February 2008, Bajaur Agency surgeon Dr. Abdul Ghani Khan was killed and 3 health department officials were injured in a bomb attack by US forces. In May, 9 health workers conducting a survey were kidnapped in North Waziristan Agency. They were released after a week. An acute shortage of medical professionals has now paralyzed the Tribal Area's 26 hospitals, 8 rural health centres and over 400 community health centres. Where once it had 66 government-appointed specialists, 435 medical officers, 48 female doctors and 182 nurses apart from nontechnical staff, it is now scrambling for staff. “Most of them prefer to stay away from their duty places for fear of lack of security there,” says one doctor, insisting on anonymity. “Lady health workers, nurses and doctors in North and South Waziristan, Bajaur and Khyber Agencies have been approaching us to get themselves transferred to the NWFP [North West Frontier Province]. Some of them have either taken long leave of absence or were staying home.” Health authorities admit that basic health indicators like infant and maternal mortality rates have worsened and question the Pakistan government's commitment to meet the United Nations Millennium Development Goals by 2015. For instance, the government was committed to bringing down the infant mortality rate to 44 from the present 116 per 1000 population, and the maternal mortality ratio to 140 from 600 per 100 000 live births in the Federally Administered Tribal Area. But Zubair Khan says that “compared to the rest of the country, the health indicators for FATA are poor.” By comparison, the infant mortality rate for all of Pakistan is 103 per 1000 live births and the maternal mortality ratio is 350 per 100 000 live births. Khan, who has appealed to authorities to improve security for health workers, blames the heightened threat of militancy for the poor health services. “Health workers face problems in North and South Waziristan and Khyber Agencies of FATA. They are told not to wear pants and shirts, not to carry cell phones or shave their beards.”