The province suffers from high infant and maternal mortality rates, at 53 per 1,000 live births and 165 per 100,000, respectively


Islamabad: The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a $100 million results-based loan to help strengthen the quality of secondary healthcare in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan.
The program will help improve the delivery of health services at secondary hospitals by modernizing infrastructure and equipment; ensuring clinical protocols, standards, and guidelines are implemented; and improving human resources planning and medicine supply chain management, said an ADB press statement received here Thursday.
“While the coronavirus placed an enormous strain on essential health services in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and across the country, Pakistan now faces unprecedented flooding exacerbating the risk of waterborne diseases,” said ADB Director General for Central and West Asia Yevgeniy Zhukov.
“This program will make a key contribution to improving the quality of secondary hospital services in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. And while it was conceived before the monsoon, it will also help people physically injured by the floods and support efforts to control the spread of infectious diseases” Zhukov added.
According to statement, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s health sector faces significant challenges including outdated secondary health care facilities and equipment, and inadequate quality assurance standards and processes.
The province suffers from high infant and maternal mortality rates, at 53 per 1,000 live births and 165 per 100,000, respectively.
“ADB’s assistance will help sustain health reforms started by the provincial government and strengthen the resilience of the health systems to future pandemics,” said ADB Senior Health Specialist for Central and West Asia Hiddo Huitzing.
“It will benefit an estimated 38 million people, including women in need of maternal health care services, and will also create jobs in the health sector,” Huitzing added.
Since 1966, ADB has committed over $37?billion in loans, grants, and other forms of financing to promote inclusive economic growth in Pakistan and improve the country’s infrastructure, energy and food security, transport networks, and social services.
In response to the floods, ADB is preparing a significant response package to support people, livelihoods, and infrastructure immediately and in the long-term.
The bank has already approved a $3 million grant to fund the immediate purchase of relief goods such as food supplies and tents. ADB is also processing a separate countercyclical package to help Pakistan weather the impacts of external shocks.
SOURCE: APP
World Cup semifinals kick off with France vs. Spain...
- 10 hours ago

PM is committed to easing access to finance for SMEs: Haroon Akhtar Khan
- 20 hours ago

Would you host part of an AI data center in your home?
- 11 hours ago
.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
IG Punjab honours 7 Sheikhupura police officers for outstanding performance
- 19 hours ago
Spain stuns France in World Cup semifinal...
- 10 hours ago

The ICE crackdown never ended
- 9 hours ago

Young people are afraid to run for office
- 9 hours ago

The Trump phone is not a serious phone
- 11 hours ago

More than 500 feared dead after boats carrying refugees sink off Myanmar, says UN
- 4 minutes ago

How to keep your cool when it feels like everything is going wrong
- 9 hours ago

ICE is quieter but still deadly
- 9 hours ago

Microsoft’s carbon emissions went up 25 percent last year
- 11 hours ago






