Leesville Daily Leader
Leesville, LA
SearchSearch
Navigation Navigation

Medical team augments Afghan doctors


Advertisement
By Lt. LORY STEVENS
Leesville Daily Leader

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan -

Doctors in Panjshir treated 473 Afghan patients this week in two districts, Rohka and Shutol, with the Panjshir  Provincial Reconstruction Team medical team assisting.  Crowds of people gathered at the clinics shortly after Air Force Capt. Glenn M. Little, medical team chief, Staff Sgt. Janine Duschka, medical technician, and Tech. Sgt. Dawn Tiemann, medical technician, arrived to support the medical engagements.
"Our Provincial Reconstruction Teams contribute immensely to improving the human aspect of Afghanistan," said Lt. Col. Stephen E. Jeselink, Task Force Warrior Deputy Commander.
"The PRT coordinates medical engagements, or missions where members of the medical team go to local villages to help Afghans in need of medical care, with local governors and Dr. Samad Karimi, the Director of Public Health (DoPH)," said Maj. Blake Bass, Panjshir PRT liaison officer at Task Force Warrior.
Medical engagements are a platform for the medical team to work closely with Afghan providers. 
This allows opportunities for learning from each other's best practices and building up the medical community in Afghanistan. 
Delivering care to locals is always a secondary objective to showing the people of Afghanistan the Coalition is interested in them and respects the expertise of their medical system.
"Capacity-building is the goal," said Bass as he explained the purpose of medical engagements is to allow local doctors to provide medical check ups as the PRT assists and supplements with items necessary for treatment.
"We assisted with 103 adult males, 196 pediatric males, 93 adult females and 81 pediatric females, totaling 473 patients within five hours," said Little.  "Common complaints were headaches, back pain and gastrointestinal issues including diarrhea, reflux disease and parasites."
There was an opportunity for the PRT to supplement some minor medicine stockage shortfalls with the supplies they brought with them to the clinics.  Pain control medications, such as Ibuprofen, Naprosyn and Tylenol, supplies of vitamins, Pedialyte and oral rehydration salts for dehydration were given out to patients during the medical engagements.
 "We also treated a lot of cases of suspected parasites and provided education on hand-washing and proper drinking of water (boiling water as opposed to drinking it from the river)," said Little.
A cultural practice for Afghan women is to be seen only by female providers.  The female provider at the clinic in Rohka District recently transferred to Kabul, leaving the community with only male providers. "What was unique about this clinic is how Duschka and Tiemann really helped out as far as their female coverage, and our assistance was also appreciated in Shutol, a district with only one medical clinic," said Little.  
"We are extremely proud of the dedicated Airmen and Soldiers in our PRTs, each one of them brings a technical competency that's unmatched," said Jeselink.

 

Loading commenting interface...
Advertisement
Advertisement

Top Ads

CopyrightCopyright
CopyrightCopyright
Leesville City Content

Get Firefox