Monthly Report January 2026 Amena Mobile Clinic (Kabul)

Monthly Project Report Amena Mobile Clinic Kabul for January 2026

This report presents the January 2026 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 during the peak winter season, when respiratory illness, chronic disease complications, and maternal health risks significantly increase.
The Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic remains a vital pillar of AGCO’s emergency health response in Kabul Province. The January 2026 achievements demonstrate the clinic’s capacity to sustain high service delivery despite seasonal pressures, ensuring continuity of care for displaced and underserved families. By combining mobile outreach, maternal and newborn care, preventive health education, and strong
operational partnerships, AGCO continues to deliver essential healthcare services with dignity and compassion to populations facing severe humanitarian vulnerability.

Operational Overview

Deployment period:

1–31 January 2026

 

Coverage Area:

Selected 20 urban and peri-urban communities across 7 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 January 2026, the Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic sustained high-impact emergency health outreach across 17 districts of Kabul Province, delivering integrated primary healthcare to vulnerable communities, internally displaced families, and residents of informal settlements with limited access to fixed health facilities. Winter conditions significantly increased health risks, particularly for women, children, and chronically ill patients, reinforcing the importance of uninterrupted mobile service delivery. Throughout the reporting month, 3,452 beneficiaries were registered, and 4,149 clinical disease cases were treated. Of these patients, over 80% were women, confirming the clinic’s critical role in addressing gender-sensitive healthcare gaps. Services reached 618 children under five and
3,494 adults, ensuring broad population coverage across age groups. Disease trends reflected seasonal vulnerability. Respiratory illnesses remained a major burden, with 567 cough and cold cases, 619 ENT infections, and 348 pneumonia cases recorded. Chronic and stress-related conditions were also prevalent, including 834 peptic disorder cases, 340 musculoskeletal conditions, and 184 hypertension cases. Mental health consultations reached 125 patients, highlighting the ongoing psychosocial impact of displacement and economic hardship. Additional services addressed urinary tract infections, anemia, skin infections, and micronutrient deficiencies, particularly among women and children. Maternal, newborn, and reproductive health services remained a central priority. The clinic delivered 271 maternal health interventions, including antenatal and postnatal care as well as family planning support. These services strengthened pregnancy monitoring, safe motherhood practices, and birth spacing awareness in communities where formal maternal care
is often inaccessible. Preventive health education complemented clinical treatment through awareness sessions on hygiene, nutrition, and winter disease prevention. This integrated model improved early care-seeking behavior and reduced the risk of severe complications among high-risk households. The January results demonstrate the clinic’s continued effectiveness in sustaining life-saving healthcare during peak winter vulnerability. Through mobile outreach, maternal health services, and
targeted disease management, AGCO ensured continuity of care for displaced and underserved populations while reinforcing community resilience under humanitarian pressure.

Disease Trends and Case Management (Nov–Dec 2025)

During January 2026, the Kabul Amena Mobile Clinic managed a high volume of winter-related illnesses consistent with seasonal vulnerability among displaced and
underserved communities. A total of 4,149 beneficiaries were registered, and 3,452 clinical disease cases were consulted during mobile clinic visits across 20 communities in 7districts of Kabul Province.

Of the total clinical patients, 739 were male and 3,373 were female, with 618 children under five and 3,494 adults receiving care. The gender distribution continues to highlight the clinic’s essential role in addressing women’s health needs in communities with limited access to fixed facilities.

The most frequently treated conditions included:

Peptic disorders: 834 cases

ENT infections: 619 cases

Cough and cold: 567 cases

Pneumonia: 348 cases

Musculoskeletal conditions: 340 cases

Hypertension: 184 cases

Mental health disorders: 125 cases

Anemia: 124 cases

Urinary tract infections: 101 cases

Skin infections and other dermatological conditions: 123 combined cases
Gastrointestinal illnesses, including acute watery and bloody diarrhea, were also recorded, though at lower levels compared to respiratory and chronic conditions.

Mental health consultations and trauma-related cases reflected ongoing psychosocial stress associated with prolonged displacement
and economic hardship.

These trends underline the persistent winter disease burden and confirm the importance of sustained mobile healthcare delivery for early diagnosis, immediate treatment, and prevention of complications among high-risk populations.

Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services

Maternal and reproductive health remained a core pillar of service delivery. In January 2026, the clinic provided a total of 271 maternal and newborn health services, including antenatal care (ANC), postnatal care (PNC), and family planning support.

Services included:

183 antenatal care visits across first through follow-up appointments
45 postnatal care consultations
43 family planning services, including oral contraceptive and injectable methods

These interventions supported safe pregnancy monitoring, maternal nutrition, and healthy birth spacing, particularly for women living in informal settlements and hard-to-reach communities

Preventive Health and Community Engagement

Alongside clinical care, the clinic continued preventive health education focused on:

Personal and household hygiene
Nutrition and micronutrient awareness
Prevention of seasonal respiratory and communicable diseases

Through coordination with Amena Mobile Clinic management and field teams, the program strengthened early detection, appropriate referral, and community-level disease prevention during the harsh winter transition period

Registered Beneficiaries

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Mother and baby care

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Total patient with clinical signs and symptoms in 2026 year

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Graphic view of the health care provided during January 2025

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

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Graph 5: Ratio of children and adult patients

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

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Family Planning

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Total patient with clinical signs and symptoms Dec 2025

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