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Afghanistan

Bringing health care to Afghanistan’s remote Bamyan province

For people who live in remote Bamyan province, MSF clinics are a lifeline, preventing long, dangerous journeys to reach care.

At nine months pregnant, Moslima rode her family’s donkey through valleys and mountain passes for more than three hours. Accompanied by her mother and husband, she arrived at a small clinic, located in Baghak, a remote village tucked away in the central highlands of Afghanistan, in the early hours of the morning to deliver her baby.

“Before this clinic was built, we used to give birth at home,” says Moslima, who has three other children. “We didn’t have access to midwives or even vaccines.”

Clinic is a lifeline for more than 20,000 people

The Baghak clinic is one of eight built in 2022 by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to provide access to free basic health services for an estimated 22,000 people living in three hard-to-reach districts of the mountainous province of Bamyan.

At each of the MSF-supported facilities, a nurse and midwife team offer general outpatient services, maternal and child health consultations, and routine vaccinations. They also help women with uncomplicated pregnancies and assist in labor so they can deliver their babies in a safe environment.

“We came here because we heard that giving birth assisted by a midwife is good for the baby’s and the mother’s health,” says Moslima. “During previous births, I didn’t feel well after the deliveries. But now I feel healthy.”

Since 2022, more than 400 women have given birth safely in the eight clinics. During that time, health staff have provided more than 80,000 outpatient consultations and more than 8,500 prenatal and postnatal consultations, while referring more than 100 women with complicated pregnancies for specialized care.

“People living in these areas often struggle to pay for transportation to reach health facilities located many hours away from their homes,” says MSF project coordinator Fathema Mansoorally. “Or they are simply not able to reach health services in time.” That was the case for Roqia Hussaini, who lives in a small village in the Band-e-Amir valley.

“My second child was born in the car”

When Roqia was pregnant with her second child, there was no clinic in Band-e-Amir. She made the two-hour drive to Bamyan Provincial Hospital by taxi, traveling through thick snow in hopes to deliver her child there. But she was not able to reach the hospital in time.

“My second child was born in the car,” says Roqia. “There was a lot of snow, so we couldn’t reach the city. When my daughter was born, she fell under the seat of the car.”

Roqia’s third child was born at home, but the baby had trouble breathing and experienced seizures shortly after birth. Roqia says that both of her children still suffer from health issues, and that she was told it is because they were not born at a health facility supported by a midwife.

“Most people in Band-e-Amir are poor,” says Roqia. “They can’t afford to take their children or the mothers to a health facility. Now, everyone [in the surrounding villages] can access the clinic, and they are very happy because they can receive treatment without any cost.”

Roqia is now three months pregnant with her fifth child, and recently came to the clinic for her second prenatal consultation.

“The car would get stuck”

Sayed Akbar lives less than a mile from the clinic and walked there for a check-up related to chronic leg pain.

Sayed says that before the clinic opened, he had to pay 2,000 afghanis ($28) to hire a private taxi to travel to Bamyan Provincial Hospital every time he or his family members became sick. As a seasonal worker, these travel costs were unaffordable.

“There’s no work during the winter,” says Sayed. “We work in the summer to cover our winter expenses, but often it’s not enough.”

Travel in the region can be difficult, as roads are poorly maintained and community members have to pitch in themselves with shovels to clear the roads after heavy snowfall.

“During winter and spring, snow and mud make it very difficult to reach Bamyan,” says Sayed. “Sometimes we even had to spend the night on the way because the car would get stuck in the mud or snow.”

Climbing mountains for a phone signal

As the midwife for the village clinic in Baghak, Masoma is always on call, ready to respond whenever a woman goes into labor.

A few months earlier, Masoma received enhanced midwifery training at MSF’s Khost Maternity Hospital and feels increasingly confident in her skills as a midwife.

“After I came back from Khost, like our people say, my heart became stronger—I became better,” says Masoma, recalling how she successfully treated two pregnant women for pre-eclampsia by herself in the clinic.

“It was flooding at the time—the roads were closed,” says Masoma. “It was not possible to go to Bamyan, so I dealt with them myself, and I didn’t have to refer the patients.” Both women recovered and were able to go home without further treatment.

For cases beyond her expertise, Masoma calls the MSF midwife supervisor based in Bamyan city and, when needed, refers women with complicated pregnancies or labors to Bamyan Provincial Hospital—a three-hour drive over poor roads.

“When we need to send a patient to the central hospital, it takes several hours due to the bad road conditions,” says Masoma.

Sending a patient to Bamyan can also depend on Masoma’s ability to get a mobile phone connection.

“We need to climb onto the roof to make a call to Bamyan,” says Masoma. “Sometimes, when it is cloudy, the connection doesn’t work on the roof, so we have to climb the mountain to get service.”

Even when the medical team in Baghak can get a mobile signal, they can’t always find a vehicle to transfer the patient to hospital.

“There are very few taxis or private cars available,” says Masoma.

The long journey home

Back in the midwife consultation room, Moslima prepares for the long journey home after giving birth. Her mother, Bibi Aqila, says she will carry the baby in her arms while Moslima rides the donkey, supported by her husband.

“It’s difficult to go by donkey, but we will manage,” says Bibi.

Despite the difficulties, Moslima is already planning to make the six-hour round trip to the clinic in a few weeks.“Soon it will be time for the baby’s first vaccinations,” she says.

MSF in Bamyan Province

MSF built eight clinics in the Yakawalang 1, Saighan, and Shibar districts of Bamyan province in 2022, and provides financial support, medical and non-medical supplies, and training to ensure continued operation of the facilities.

In 2024, medical teams across all eight facilities provided 57,171 outpatient consultations, gave 5,165 doses of routine vaccinations, provided 4,530 gynecological consultations, and assisted 155 deliveries. MSF also supports human resources in the maternity waiting area of Bamyan Provincial Hospital to increase timely access to health care for pregnant women with complicated or high-risk pregnancies.

In 2024, MSF also provided support in the form of human resources and medical supply donations to Bamyan provincial hospital in response to a surge in measles cases and an outbreak of acute watery diarrhea.