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FROM Northern afghanistan Chris Wilson is a nurse and midwife from Cairns, Australia. She has been the Field Coordinator for the Médecins Sans Frontières' Northern Afghanistan project in Faryab Province since June 2003. This is her second mission with Médecins Sans Frontières. Chris was previously a Médecins Sans Frontières volunteer in Armenia. It has just gone 06:30, the sun has shown its face but there is little warmth at this time of the year. Winter is fast approaching northern Afghanistan. Soon the days will become dramatically shorter, severely restricting our movements to the far-reaching villages of Faryab province. This region of Afghanistan is a remote area, poor and at risk of outbreaks of infectious diseases and malnutrition. Here there are very few international organisations for a province of almost one million inhabitants. Médecins Sans Frontières is the only medical organisation in this area providing much needed aid. I travel the 77km journey, from our base in Maimana to the distant village of Shakh in the southern district of Qaysar, with my Afghan colleagues. The road conditions are appalling. It will take us three and half hours to drive there. Today we will meet with community elders to finalise the arrangements required for Médecins Sans Frontières to open a health clinic. The elders have been overwhelmed with the thought of an organisation taking interest in their isolated community. Médecins Sans Frontières has been operating an emergency nutrition program in this remote community since June this year. Three years of severe drought resulted in extreme malnutrition which necessitated Médecins Sans Frontières' intervention. When the seasonal rain arrived, so increasing food availability, the situation dramatically improved allowing the nutrition programs to be safely withdrawn. Shakh has a population of approximately 48,000. The existing health post has one doctor. With Médecins Sans Frontières' support a health team will be established to include vaccinators and traditional birthing attendants. In the coming year services will be expanded to include health educators and mother and child health workers. Consultations and treatment will be provided free of charge.
Médecins Sans Frontières commenced its activities in Faryab province in 1997 and currently supports six clinics, soon to be increased with the opening of Shakh. The project focuses on delivering primary health care services but also responds to medical emergencies such as outbreaks of measles, cholera and meningitis. During the six-year period of Médecins Sans Frontières presence in Faryab, the international staff have been evacuated on numerous occasions due to the extremely unstable security situation. During these absences, the national staff have continued the project activities, for several months at a time. The national staff have a wealth of experience and the project could not continue without them. Just in the last few weeks, security has again become unstable and renewed warfare between political factions has forced us to suspend our activities in the south of the province. It is hoped a peaceful resolution will be reached soon, allowing us to resume our work in these vulnerable areas. Soon I will return to sunny Cairns and life in Afghanistan will be a thing of the past, but the fond memories shall be with me always. October 2003
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