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Volume 350:1927-1929 May 6, 2004 Number 19
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The Battle for Access — Health Care in Afghanistan
Brigg Reilley, M.P.H., Gloria Puertas, M.D., M.P.H., and Anne-Sophie Coutin, M.D.

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Recent rounds on the infectious disease ward in Mir Wais Hospital, in Kandahar, Afghanistan, found a young farmhand recuperating from meningitis sitting with the two friends who had accompanied him to the hospital. He had survived the disease, but only barely, and the episode had left him blind. In quiet tones, the man discussed with the medical staff whether his condition was permanent. In another room, a family of six was recovering from typhoid fever. The family members were fortunate that they had sought care early, because typhoid has a fatality rate of nearly 10 percent in Kandahar. The most . . . [Full Text of this Article]


Source Information

From Médecins sans Frontières, New York (B.R.), Herat, Afghanistan (G.P.), and Kabul, Afghanistan (A.-S.C.).




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