Development and
Cooperation

Letter

Public response

In our March edition, we published a letter from our reader concerning the article on "Systemic failure" by Andreas Wulf in January.

Important criterion

D+C/E+Z 2014/01, p. 17 f., Andreas Wulf: "Systemic failure"

The author correctly points out that health-care services must be marked by universal presence, accessibility and affordability. I’d like to add another criterion: sustainability. I have been working as a CIM expert in Afghanistan’s  Min­istry for Higher Education for four years, specialising in administrative health issues. Afghanistan’s Ministry of Public Health gets a lot of support from donors. As soon as that money stops flowing, however, many health services will discontinue their work. Many patients, especially poor people, will no longer have access to treatment. A large number of nations and organisations have been active in Afghanistan in the past 12 years, and they have spent millions on health care. Unfortunately, there is no concept for making essential services that depend on donor funding viable in the long run.

Dr. Yahya Wardak, Kabul

Editor’s note: CIM stands for Centre for International Migration and Development. This Frankfurt-based agency seconds experts to institutions and companies in developing countries.

Link to the article

Latest Articles

Child marriage is a common phenomenon in poor countries: A 13-year-old girl from Mali with her daughter.

Manufacturing

Made in Chibombo

Women need access to finance: Women attend a micro finance collection in Zanzibar, Tanzania.

Diversity

Women at work

Not many women are as successful as Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw (right). She is the founder and Managing Director of India’s premier biotechnology company, Biocon Limited. In 2006, she and Bollywood star actor Shah Rukh Khan (l.) launched an innovative cancer drug.

Financial inclusion

Investing in women

Most viewed articles