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2009-2019: Boost Hospital

Sharing patients’ stories “as devastating as their injuries” in Afghanistan

The heavy clashes that erupted in and around Lashkar Gah city, in Helmand province, southern Afghanistan, on 11 October so far show no signs of abating. The main trauma hospital for war-wounded, run by another medical organisation, remains under pressure. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) supports the nearby Boost provincial hospital and since Sunday night has been acting as an overflow facility to respond to the influx of wounded.

This is a first-hand account from Marianna Cortesi, hospital coordinator at the MSF-supported Boost provincial hospital in Helmand province.

Of the 52 war-wounded patients we received between 11 and 14 October – all with stories as devastating as their injuries – two in particular asked me to share their stories. Beyond the medical care they received, I feel an equal responsibility for ensuring their voices are heard.

I sat with Safia this morning. Her strength and resilience were still present, but I knew that her aching and now hollow belly would be a lifelong reminder of the baby shot dead in her womb. And of her indescribable suffering for the loss of this child she wanted so much.

Safia was seven months’ pregnant and had experienced four years of anticipation of what would be her firstborn. She was so happy about her pregnancy, and since the moment she fell pregnant the entire family had carefully watched over her. Everyone was looking forward to the delivery. It was so close now; so much so, that they told me they felt they could lay out the little clothes for when the new arrival would be welcomed home.

On Sunday, Safia was chatting outside her house. The weather is changing in Afghanistan. It’s a little cooler and less comfortable to be outside, but on that day more than the weather was noticeably changing. Since the previous day, the people in Safia’s village had heard the sounds of the fighting getting closer. And today maybe too close. Suddenly she felt a pain. A stray bullet had pierced both of them – mother and unborn child. And so, their journey began. A rush to a hospital before it was too late. But rushing isn’t easy here around Lashkar Gah, and the family needed to take a different and longer route to the main trauma hospital because of the fighting.

Safia’s grief in the ward consumes me – in the womb or in the grave, her firstborn had no peace. Marianna Cortesi, hospital coordinator at Boost hospital

After travelling for hours, Safia was then referred from the first health facility they reached to the MSF-supported Boost provincial hospital. And it’s because of this that Safia and I crossed paths. After a life-saving caesarean-section, she is now stable. But without her child.

On Monday, the family went back to their village to bury the baby – Safia remained with us in intensive care. But as they gathered for the ceremony, they had to flee from shooting and make their way back to the hospital to wait for Safia to be discharged.

Safia’s grief in the ward consumes me – in the womb or in the grave, her firstborn had no peace.

I also sat with Zina this morning, in the female surgical ward. Her breast is bandaged from where she was shot by a stray bullet that narrowly missed her 8-month-old baby. She was breastfeeding at the time. While Zina sought care, she had to leave her baby at home with her eldest child who is still small. I think of this, a child left at home to care for a baby while your mother receives treatment for a gunshot wound.

As I got up to go, she asked me, ‘When can I go home? I need to feed my baby’.

*Patients' names have been changed to protect their privacy.

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