Monthly Project Report Amena Mobile Clinic Kabul for December 2025
This report presents the December 2025 activities and achievements of the Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic, implemented by the Afghanistan Green Crescent Organization (AGCO) under the Emergency Health Project. It provides a comprehensive overview of healthcare services delivered to vulnerable communities across Kabul Province, including patient statistics, disease trends, and key public health interventions conducted during the reporting month.
The report reflects AGCO’s continued commitment to providing accessible, equitable, and life-saving primary healthcare services to internally displaced persons, returnees, and underserved urban and peri-urban populations, particularly during the winter season when health risks increase.
The Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic remains a vital pillar of AGCO’s emergency health
response in Kabul Province. The December 2025 achievements demonstrate the clinic’s effectiveness in responding to seasonal health needs, sustaining high service coverage, and ensuring continuity of care for displaced and underserved populations.
By combining mobile outreach, maternal health services, preventive education, and strong partnerships, AGCO continues to deliver life-saving healthcare with dignity and compassion to those most in need.
Operational Overview
Deployment period:
1–31 December 2025
Coverage Area:
Selected urban and peri-urban communities across 17 districts of Kabul Province,
including informal settlements and areas hosting internally displaced populations
Objective:
To provide free, accessible, and equitable primary healthcare services to vulnerable,
displaced, and underserved populations, with particular emphasis on women, children, the elderly, and patients with chronic conditions, especially during the winter season when health risks increase.
Service delivery model:
Mobile clinic outreach delivering integrated primary healthcare, maternal and
reproductive health services, and preventive health education directly to communities with limited access to fixed health facilities.
Team Composition:
2 Medical Doctors (1 male, 1 female)
1 Female Midwife
1 Pharmacist
1 Driver
Narrative
During December 2025, the Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic continued its essential outreach operations across 17 districts of Kabul Province, delivering integrated primary healthcare services to vulnerable communities, internally displaced families, and residents of informal settlements with limited access to fixed health facilities. Special attention remained focused on women, children, the elderly, and chronically ill patients.
Throughout the reporting period, the clinic registered 3,193 beneficiaries and provided 4,438 clinical consultations, demonstrating sustained demand for mobile health services. Of the total registered patients, 952 were male and 2,429 were female, highlighting the clinic’s critical role in addressing women’s health needs. The services reached 695 children under five years of age and 3,686 adults, reflecting a broad age coverage.
Disease Trends and Case Management (Nov–Dec 2025)
The most commonly treated conditions during December included:
Respiratory infections (cough and cold, ENT infections, pneumonia), which increased
due to cold weather;
Gastrointestinal diseases, including acute watery and bloody diarrhea;
Peptic disorders and musculoskeletal conditions;
Hypertension and anemia, particularly among adult and elderly patients;
Mental health disorders and trauma-related cases, linked to prolonged
displacement and psychosocial stress;
Skin infections and micro-nutrient deficiencies, especially among women and children
Notably, the clinic managed 888 peptic disorder cases, 612 pneumonia cases, 641 ENT cases, and 422 cough and cold cases, underscoring the seasonal health burden faced by vulnerable populations during winter months.
Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services
Maternal and child health remained a core component of service delivery. In December 2025, the clinic provided 237 maternal and reproductive health services, including:
Antenatal care (ANC) across multiple follow-up visits;
Postnatal care (PNC) services;
Family planning counseling and provision of contraceptive methods, including tablets and injectable options.
These services played a vital role in promoting safe pregnancy practices,
maternal health awareness, and birth spacing, particularly for women living in hard-to-reach settlements.
Preventive Health and Community Engagement
Alongside clinical services, the Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic continued its preventive health education efforts, delivering awareness sessions on:
Personal and household hygiene;
Nutrition and micronutrient intake;
Prevention of seasonal respiratory
and communicable diseases.
Through ongoing coordination with Amena Mobile Clinic Management, the
clinic strengthened early detection, appropriate treatment, and prevention of
both communicable and non-communicable diseases during the winter transition period.
Registered Beneficiaries

Mother and baby care

Total patient with clinical signs and symptoms in 2025 year

Graphic view of the health care provided during December 2025

Graph 4: Ratio of different diseases treated by Amena Mobile Clinic

Graph 5: Ratio of children and adult patients

Graph 6: Ratio of Male and Female patients for different diseases

Family Planning

Total patient with clinical signs and symptoms Dec 2025

