Childbirth a challenge in conflict zone
'I pray to Allah to grant my children health. I want a good life - a beautiful life - for us all.'
Baby Faadumo lies quietly with her big, dark eyes wide open. Her tiny head and dainty fists rest on a nest of blankets wrapped in a shawl. To keep her warm, the bundle has been placed in a black plastic bag.
Faadumo is 15 days old and was born prematurely at seven months. Her mother, who was only 15, died during childbirth.
Ideally, Faadumo should be kept in an incubator. But here in Bosaso General Hospital in the state of Puntland, Somalia, few things are ideal, and a plastic bag and blankets are the best doctors can do to keep her warm - and alive.
"We need incubators, and our staff also need training on how to use them," said Mohamed Said, the hospital's pediatrician.
Besides being premature, Faadumo is also malnourished. She weighed 1 kilogram at birth, and not much more now - 1.1 kg.
When asked about the challenges his country faces, Abdirizak Hersi Hassan, director-general of the Ministry of Health in Puntland, sums them up in two words: "Too many."
Since the collapse of the central government in 1991, Somalia has been in an almost continuous state of war, and its health systems are mostly supported by development partners and funded by donors. UNICEF alone supports 70 percent of Somalia's health facilities.
"Without such support," Hassan says, "the health systems will collapse."
At the maternity ward in the mother and child health clinic of 100 Bush Internally Displaced Persons camp, Malyuum Osman, 29, rests with her day-old newborn, Mohamed. Over the years she has suffered two miscarriages and seen two children die - a daughter from diarrhea and a boy in an accident.
Despite the difficult basic conditions here, the clinic, which is staffed by 14 midwives and nurses, is doing wonders for the local population of 15,000 people living in the various displacement camps. It is one of the many clinics supported by UNICEF under a health and nutrition program that helps women, children and families.
However, there are no firm plans for the continuation of the program in 2017 or beyond. UNICEF, along with its partners, is mobilizing resources to keep the health services open and the 2,000 health workers paid. There are only 3,000 in the entire country.
Soon Malyuum will be able to go home with the baby - back to her three other children. The family of five, now including little Mohamed, survives on $2 a day, which she makes by cooking for the workers at construction sites. But she remains optimistic.
"I pray to Allah to grant my children health," she says. "I want a good life - a beautiful life - for us all."
For China Daily