|
Conservatism
stonewalling healthcare in quake zones
Women not allowed to see male doctors
DM Monitoring
ISLAMABAD—Women in the earthquake-affected areas
of Pakistan are facing a major health crisis,
especially when it comes to gynaecological
complications.
According to The Independent, a British
newspaper, women in the conservative northern
region are not being allowed to see male
doctors. Samina Wali is three months pregnant
and desperate for an abortion. One look at her
living conditions and it is easy to see why she
would consider such a taboo action in an area of
Pakistan known as the Jihadi belt.
Her home and its contents have been reduced to a
pile of rubble. And, unlike many of the now
homeless survivors of the earthquake, the
30-year-old, who already has six children,
doesn’t even have a proper tent. “I have no
shelter. How can I give birth?” she asks a
medic, gesturing to the plastic sheet under
which she lives with her family. Samina will not
get her wish. Abortion is forbidden in Pakistan
except for medical reasons. There is, of course,
the distinct possibility that the baby will not
survive. Disease and infection are now rife
among the tent dwellers in the ruins of Bazargai,
a mountain village in Batamori in the North West
Frontier Province. But a more pressing killer is
the weather. Within 10 days everything will be
under several feet of snow.
The medic Shabana Ashraf continues her rounds in
the village, where every house bar one has been
flattened. The 24-year-old is one of five staff
running a medical camp in Bazargai. Operating
out of two tents — one for women and one for men
— it caters for around 5,000 people living in
the surrounding area.
Survivors with major injuries have been taken to
hospital, and the medics are now focusing their
attention on keeping survivors alive through the
winter. More than 100 patients are treated each
day, around 30 per cent of whom already have
chest infections, including potentially fatal
pneumonia. Typhoid has also broken out, and
scabies is rife. Diarrhoea, dysentery and
depression are also common.
Shabana is one of two female medics in the camp
and as such a vital resource, as some men are
reluctant to allow their wives to be seen by
male doctors. There were more women victims of
the tragedy than men, for they were more likely
to be at home when the earthquake struck at
8.45am. “When the women doctors came to the
camp, the number of patients increased,” said Dr
Rubina Saigol, director of ActionAid Pakistan,
which runs the facility.
“A lot of time men didn’t want to take their
women to see a male doctor and a lot of women
were denied medical care. This is a highly
religious area. The idea of purdah and the four
walls of the house is very strong here. Women
have less access to hospitals, because of strong
social traditions. Our entire emergency response
is specifically geared towards helping women and
children, because they are the most affected.”
The charity has also hired a gender co-ordinator
to make sure women receive the aid that is due
to them.
There are particular medical problems for the
women here. With no toilets, men are able to use
the fields at any time, but women only feel
comfortable venturing out there very early in
the morning or at night. The incidence of
urinary tract infections is high, and women no
longer have the privacy to wash and dry the
strips of cotton they use during menstruation.
Fifty per cent of married women are pregnant.
Both mothers and newborns will run the risk of
tetanus and septicaemia. The camp is hoping to
establish a birthing centre.
Shabana picks her way through the piles of rock
and timber and calls at the tent of her next
patient, Husan Afroz. The 65-year-old’s
hypertension has worsened since the disaster.
“I’m in pain. I feel that the earth is moving
all the time. I can’t sleep,” says Husan, who
also has severe arthritis. “I’m still terrified
and in shock. I thought I was going to die.
I don’t feel comfortable in a tent. I can’t
stand up. I’m always bent, and it’s a problem
for my knees.” Another patient, Mehboob Jan, is
85 and has chronic TB. Her 22 relatives, none of
whom has been inoculated, are living in two
adjacent tents. “I was at home when the
earthquake hit,” she recalls. “All the walls
collapsed. I thought somebody had lifted up the
house and dropped it. I was saying my prayers,
and I think that’s why I survived. Somebody
pulled me out.”Now there’s no toilet or water to
wash myself before praying. I just go through
the actions.” She will be transferred to
hospital by the end of the day.
Zarina Bibi, 60, is sitting on a mattress in her
tent in obvious pain. She has suffered from a
cracked pelvis since her kitchen wall toppled on
to her. For the first week, her male relatives
refused to allow her to go to hospital until
they were convinced by the medical staff that it
was the best thing for her. However, since she
has returned to the camp following treatment,
the family hasn’t been keeping up with her
physiotherapy, and she will have to return. She
also has problems caused by the menopause that
will need to be addressed.The mother is lucky to
be too old to have been pregnant when the
earthquake hit. “Women who were pregnant have
been crushed and the foetuses are dead,” says
Shabana. “We don’t have the surgical instruments
for the abortions. If we had surgical items we
could deal with such types of conditions as well
as the D&Cs.” Many women are now asking for
contraceptives, another taboo subject, because
they feel unable to look after more children. It
is a feeling Samina Wali knows only too well. |