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Healthcare under sanctions in Iraq: An elective experience 

Authors: Muhammed Akunjee a; Asif Ali
Affiliation:   a Guy's, Kings and St Thomas' Hospital Medical Schools, London
DOI: 10.1080/13623690208409633
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: journal Medicine, Conflict and Survival, Volume 18, Issue 3 July 2002 , pages 249 - 257
Formats available: PDF (English)
Previously published as: Journal of the Medical Association for Prevention of War (0265-2196) until 1985
Previously published as: Medicine and War (0748-8009) until 1996
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Abstract

As a consequence of the 1991 Gulf War and the ensuing UN sanctions, not only was the Iraqi government destroyed, but also the general infrastructure of the country was disrupted, with the civilian population and public services bearing much of the aftermath. Ten years after the war, the health system in Iraq is still in a perilous situation. The effects of sanctions have affected almost every aspect of medical care. There has been a mass exodus of health care professionals, many of whom were foreign nationals. Doctors' salaries fell rapidly to only $30 a month, barely enough to buy the necessities of daily living. Iraqi hospitals have no access to foreign journals, textbooks or the internet; leading to a generation of out-dated and under-skilled health professionals. Most worrying is the ever-present embargo on many essential medicines. Only one-third of the medicines are available for chemotherapy for the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in children (UKALL 97 modified 99 protocol). At the Al-Mansour paediatric teaching hospital this shortfall has led to a substantial increase in childhood mortality, with disease-free survival rates falling to 25 per cent compared to 60 per cent in 1988.
Keywords: Childhood leukaemia; Healthcare; Iraq; Sanctions
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