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Dasht-e-Barchi, Afghanistan

The number of deliveries has doubled since the project opened

Women’s health advisor with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and midwife Kara Blackburn recently completed an assessment of MSF’s fastest growing emergency obstetrics and neonatal care project, in Dasht-e-Barchi Hospital in the Afghan capital of Kabul.

“The predominantly Hazara community that we are looking after in the west of Kabul is a historically marginalised and poor population, displaced from their original mountainous homes in the provinces of Afghanistan by decades of ongoing conflict. Over the last ten years they have slowly moved into what was originally a smaller Hazara community in Kabul. The population has grown exponentially, from an estimated 200,000 in 2001 to approximately 1.2 million people today.

I was asked to visit the Dasht-e-Barchi project because the number of deliveries has doubled since the project opened just over a year ago!  In round figures, the total for 2015 was 11,000. It will be more this year. We wanted to review the challenges of upholding quality of care under the sheer pressure of more and more women coming to deliver in our facility.

In the last 24 hours of my visit the team managed 60 deliveries – in any hospital this is a huge volume, and yet everyone kept up the pace; striving to provide a good quality of care. I was really impressed. The hospital I worked at in Australia would have struggled with such a workload.

The increase in deliveries in Dasht-e-Barchi hospital is related to a number of factors, including the hospital offering free, quality care, and that there simply aren’t enough maternity beds in Kabul.

We run a labour and delivery room, operating theatre, post-delivery services and a newborn unit for sick and at risk babies. The Afghan Ministry of Public Health looks after the antenatal clinic and postnatal clinic and there is another NGO, Marie Stopes International, providing family planning twice per week.

Dasht-e-Barchi maternity in Kabul
An MSF midwife dries a newborn In the delivery room of the district hospital. This is part of the routine care that all newborns receive in the first minutes of life.
Aurelie Baumel/MSF

As a referral centre we see a cross section of low-risk women and high-risk women, and we’re managing a significant number of complications – which is why it’s important to provide emergency obstetric care. But the majority of the local women and their families know to come to the hospital if the mother goes into labour or if there’s a complication. This could be post-partum haemorrhage, pre-eclampsia (high blood pressure and blood in the urine during pregnancy), or placental abruption (when the placenta partially or fully detaches from the uterine wall). Thankfully, because we see these patients in time to manage their conditions, we don’t see the severe complications that might develop from these.

Postpartum care is one of the areas of service MSF has been strengthening. It is not only part of safe delivery care; it can also contribute to prevention of future complications. Our staff advise and remind new mothers to return to the hospital if they are bleeding; or if their baby becomes quiet and is not feeding. The first 24 hours are really crucial. So when the women and their babies leave the hospital (usually six hours post-delivery unless there are complications), you need to make sure that all the necessary messages have been passed on clearly.”

Since November 2014, Médecins Sans Frontières has supported the Afghan Ministry of Public Health District Hospital in Dasht-e-Barchi.The 30-bed maternity and 20-bed newborn unit offer services free of charge, with a focus on complicated cases. During its first year of activity,MSF’s Dasht-e-Barchi maternity ward carried out 10,727 deliveries, 17% complicated. The high quality care for patients is provided by a team of about 191 Afghan and international qualified professionals.