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Before
the war with Iran (1980-1988) Iraq had a series of hospitals and
primary health care centers and public health care laboratories
in each of its 18 governates. During the 1970s and 1980s many of
these were well established and well equipped through partnerships
with European and Japanese corporations. However resources dwindled
during the Iran-Iraq war and the situation greatly deteriorated
after the Kuwait invasion in 1990 and subsequent Gulf war when comprehensive
economic sanctions were imposed in August 1990.
This
deterioration had a severe impact on Iraqi citizens and health infrastructure
.According to UNICEF the number of primary health centers and maternal
and child health clinics in Iaq declined from a pre-Gulf war network
of 1800 to 929 in the 1990s.The UN Oil for Food Programme was started
in late 1997 and offered some relief but the looting and the destruction
of hospitals and laboratories following the war of March 2003 substantially
affected the ability of the health care system to diagnose treat
and monitor and prevent disease .The post-war damage was clearly
extensive. All government public health laboratories were demolished
and looters had plundered every thing including floor tiles, window
panes, pipes, wires etc.
The
surviving health care institutions were in urgent need of generators,
air conditioner fans, medicines, labotatory reagents and increased
capacity to accommodate the increasingly large number of individuals
and casualties of violence. There are no disinfectants and all glassware
and microscopic slides had to be washed and reused. Underlying this
was the collapse in the administrative systems, lack of funds, the
inability to import materials, and shortage of basic supplies and
medical equipment that was either in a state of disrepair or cannibalised
for spare parts due to the sanctions. The situation improved gradually
through NGOs and by the donation from the WHO.
On
August 20 a car bomb exploded in Baghdad and killed 17 UN personnel
and injured over 100 people freezing their duties and movements.
Later kidnapping of the staff of the NGO and asking for ransoms
by some insurgences forced the NGO to withdraw and close their offices.
Among the problems in the health sector is the pervasive corruption
and the political conflicts in administration slowed down the flow
of donations which were promised by the USA and the rest of the
world. All these hampered reconstruction and the rehabilitation
processes.
There
is a remarkable increase in infectious diseases due to poverty and
malnutrition and the daily street violence leading to the loss of
food earning members in the families and the little decompositions
they get. The main reason for the unreliability of infectious disease
surveillance is the unavailability of well equipped laboratories,
for example, most laboratory results for meningitis are either negative
or contaminated, even at the big general hospitals (formerly Saddam's
general hospitals) and paediatric hospitals (in each governate capital)
adding to that is the increasing no. of cases with the limited staff.
The uses of biosafety level 2 hoods at these hospitals was prohibited
by biological war inspectors who had visited Iraq before the war.
Accordingly the use of safe lab practices constituted a major problem.
Generally
serology for Typhoid fever is conducted by the misleading slide
agglutination tests. Tuberculosis is one of the endemic diseases
in Iraq, neither T.B culture nor sensitivity tests for multi-drug
resistant strains are done at the governate chest hospitals. Because
the problems in water treatment, water distribution sewage pumping
acute watery diarrhea is very common and there are great number
of hepatitis among poor people. UNICEF had reported that 40% of
water samples analyzed in Iraq failed tests due to contamination
or insufficient disinfection.
Many
households do not have individual connection to treated pipe water
or 24h access to water, such householders typically store water
in the home and this water is vulnerable to contamination (primarily
from handling ) during transport and storage even if it is clear
at source. Damage of the electrical grid lead to the perishing of
considerable amounts of vaccines, lab. reagents, looting of shipments
and medicines during transportation exacerbate the problems. Bacterial
culture and susceptibility a necessary component for a rational
antibacterial prescribing is not uncommon and diagnosis is made
largely on the strength of clinical signs and symptoms.
Many
physicians have been known to use chemotherapy as a diagnostic tool
where cure confirm diagnosis. In addition to physicians, nurses
and pharmacists others are licensed to supply antimicrobials
e.g. midwives ,community health workers and dispensing assistants.
However these drugs can also be obtained for unsanctioned stall
keepers itinerant vendors, hawkers and purveyors of other materials
who are often the first point of call for patients.
To
complicate the matter there are drug venders. It is a quiet a widespread
habit to ingest antimicrobials and to store others from uncompleted
courses even beyond
the expiration date and later self administer these drugs for self
diagnosed conditions or dispense them to family members and friends
this is because poverty and the lack of access to health care for
many reasons such as daily street violence, insecurity, transportation
difficulties because of the high prices of the gasoline but the
more precise this persists even among high income and educated patients
also. The Iraq health sector is in urgent needs for a shot in the
arm and is essentially vital for evolutionism a new statistical
campaign with the help of the WHO and to back up this with all the
measures.
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