Medics beg for help as Iraqis die needlessly

Source Independent (UK)

The disintegration of Iraq's health service is leaving its civilians defenseless in the continuing violence that is rocking the country, Iraqi doctors have warned. As many as half of the civilian deaths, calculated at 655,000 since the 2003 invasion, might have been avoided if proper medical care had been provided to the victims, they say. In separate appeals, the doctors beg for help to stem the soaring death rate and ease the suffering of injured families and children. They say governments and the international medical community are ignoring their plight. In the first 14 months after the 2003 invasion almost $20 billion was spent on reconstruction by US and British funds, including hundreds of millions on rebuilding and re-equipping the country's network of 180 hospitals and clinics. But billions went missing because of a combination of criminal activity, corruption and incompetence, leaving Iraqis without even the essentials for basic medical care. The violence for which the occupation forces failed to plan has meant a $200 million reconstruction project for building 142 primary care centers ran out of cash earlier this year with just 20 on course to be completed, an outcome the World Health Organization described as "shocking." In March, the campaign group Medact said 18,000 physicians had left the country since 2003, an estimated 250 of those that remained had been kidnapped and, in 2005 alone, 65 killed. Medact also said "easily treatable conditions such as diarrhea and respiratory illness caused 70 percent of all child deaths," and that "of the 180 health clinics the US hoped to build by the end of 2005, only four have been completed and none opened." Writing in the British Medical Journal on Oct. 20, Dr. Basssim Al Sheibani and two colleagues from the Diwaniyah College of Medicine in Iraq says that, as the violence escalates, "the reality is we cannot provide any treatment for many of the victims." "Emergency departments are staffed by doctors who do not have the proper experience or skills to manage emergency cases. Medical staff ... admit that more than half of those killed could have been saved if trained and experienced staff were available." They say equipment, supplies and drugs are in many cases unobtainable. "Many emergency departments are no more than halls with beds, fluid suckers and oxygen bottles." They add: "Our experience has taught us that poor emergency medicine services are more disastrous than the disaster itself. But despite the daily violence that is crushing Iraq, the international medical community is doing little more than looking on." The shortages were graphically highlighted in a Channel 4 Dispatches documentary made by GuardianFilms, and broadcast in February. It revealed that children with diarrheal disease were dying of dehydration because hospitals lacked the right sized needles to inject them with fluids. In Diwaniyah children's hospital, doctors were shown struggling to give drugs by ventilation to a two-day old girl, Zehara, who was born with underdeveloped lungs, because they had the wrong sized plastic mask. Masks costs pennies but, like all other equipment, are in short supply. Zehara's father was dispatched onto the streets to try to buy vitamin K on the black market, urgently needed for an injection. But it was too late–by the time he returned, she was dead and her twin brother also passed away shortly afterwards. In a separate report on Oct. 19, Peter Kandela, an Iraqi general practioner, traveled through Jordan and Syria interviewing Iraqi medical staff who had escaped the violence. "The current Iraqi brain drain is the worst the country has seen in its modern history," he writes. "In the new Iraq there is a price tag linked to your position and status. Those doctors who have stayed in the country know what they are worth in kidnapping terms and ensure their relatives have easy access to the necessary funds to secure their speedy release if they are taken." He describes a kidney surgeon seized by a group of armed men, despite the presence of security guards who he had hired to protect himself, whose first act was to go through his contacts book for other potential victims. "They had the audacity to suggest that in return for receiving better treatment in captivity I should recommend others for kidnapping," the surgeon said. He was released unharmed after a ransom of $250,000 was paid by his wife. In Baghdad where no one can escape violence, hospitals provided the last refuge. But they are now unsafe and Iraqis are avoiding them. Public hospitals in the city are controlled by Shia militias–who have come under suspicion for allowing death squads to enter them to kill Sunnis. Abu Nasr, the cousin of a man injured by a car bomb who was dragged from his hospital bed and riddled with bullets, told the Washington Post: "We would prefer now to die instead of going to the hospitals. I will never go back to one, never. The hospitals have become killing fields."