Plastic surgeon Abdul Ghafar Ghayur is practising his own brand of
welfare in Afghanistan, where access to healthcare is limited and many
cannot afford private treatment.
The money he
makes from the hundreds of nose jobs and Botox injections he performs on
wealthy Afghans allows him to perform life-changing surgery on
low-income patients at a discount or sometimes for free.
Ghayur's
practice in the capital Kabul offers a microcosm of Afghan medicine,
where doctors, driven by a sense of civic duty, try to fill huge gaps in
a public health system devastated by decades of war.
The surgeon ticked off parliamentarians, business directors and
other "rich people" among his clients, who got their ideas online or
during trips abroad and were prepared to pay thousands of dollars for
cosmetic surgery. The average Afghan monthly wage is around $35.
Income
from such treatments, a relatively new phenomenon in Afghanistan,
allows him to make a good living as well as treat low-income patients
who turn up unannounced seeking reconstructive surgery to treat disease,
congenital disorders and post-traumatic wounds.
Many of these patients arrive with late stage illnesses and require urgent attention.
"If
a patient comes and says 'I can only pay $100', I can do it for $100.
Or $20, or $30," Ghayur told Reuters during a recent morning
consultation.
"Because if we decide to wait until the patient has the money, the patient will have no chance of survival."
He
added: "I have treated lots of skin cancer patients for free, because
some of them had small tumours that were 100 percent curable."
"GOD MADE MY NOSE"
Healthcare
in Afghanistan has improved since the hardline Islamist Taliban
movement was ousted in 2001, according to the World Health Organization,
but key indicators like infant and maternal mortality still rank among
the worst in the world.
Public hospitals are
also chronically under-funded and patients are expected to cover basic
medical supplies like bandages, medicine and even wages.
Nose
jobs are the most popular cosmetic surgeries, Ghayur said. He performed
over 500 since opening his practice in 2013, many on members of the
Hazara ethnic minority who wanted to elongate their distinctive Asian
noses.
Bibi Zara, an ethnic Pashtun who had
come to have the bridge of her nose raised with silicone, said her
husband wanted her to look more beautiful.
"God
made my nose so I am happy with it, but my husband wanted it," she
said, smiling widely, her eyes the same opal blue colour of her burqa.
Breast
procedures were comparatively rare, Ghayur said, and cost around
$3-5,000, depending on the patient's economic status. He has performed
five such operations since 2013, when he returned home from his studies
in neighbouring Pakistan.
Plastic surgery in
Afghanistan is a particularly neglected field. The health ministry
counts just half a dozen registered practices and says it is not offered
as a discipline at medical school.
"Most
surgeons who perform heart, kidney and other surgeries carry out
cosmetic surgeries too," said Mohammad Ismail Kawusi, a spokesman for
the Ministry of Public Health.
Ghayur said
low-income patients often arrived after one or more botched operations,
performed by doctors who were the only practitioners in the area and
trained to deal with war wounds.
"Usually if patients arrive, doctors will try. They won't say, 'this is not my field,'" Ghayur said.
He
spent six years studying plastic surgery in Pakistan and received
further training abroad from the German Cleft Children's Aid Society.
The
group has since covered costs for him to treat hundreds of children,
including many without access to medical care in less stable parts of
the country.
Ghayur performs most operations in
Kabul, but also works elsewhere. His latest trip was to Kunduz, a
province partially under the control of Taliban militants and battered
by intense fighting this summer.
"I operated in
the city, and there was no fighting," he said of the provincial
capital. "Outside the city there was lots of fighting at night, while I
was sleeping, about a kilometre away."
No comments:
Post a Comment