Monthly Report January 2026 Amena Mobile Clinic (Kunar)

Monthly Project Report Amena Mobile Clinic Kabul for January 2026

This report presents the January 2026 activities and achievements of the Kunar Amena Fixed Health Clinic, implemented by the Afghanistan Green Crescent Organization (AGCO) under the Emergency Health Project. It provides a comprehensive overview of healthcare services delivered to internally displaced families and vulnerable host communities residing in and around Khas Kunar IDP Camp, including patient statistics, disease patterns, and key health interventions conducted during the reporting month.
In January 2026, the clinic registered 1,973 beneficiaries and managed 2,182 clinical disease cases, reflecting strong community reliance on fixed-site services during the winter season. The reporting period highlights AGCO’s continued commitment to providing accessible, equitable, and life-saving primary healthcare to displaced populations facing heightened risks from respiratory illness, chronic disease complications, and maternal health vulnerabilities. The Kunar Amena Fixed Health Clinic remains a critical frontline health facility supporting earthquake-affected and displaced families in Kunar Province. The January achievements demonstrate the clinic’s capacity to maintain consistent service delivery under seasonal pressure while strengthening maternal care, disease management, and preventive health education.
By combining fixed-clinic care, maternal and newborn services, targeted disease treatment, and community engagement, AGCO continues to deliver essential healthcare with dignity and compassion to families living in fragile humanitarian conditions.

Operational Overview

Deployment period:

1–31 January 2026

 

Coverage Area:

 

The Kunar Amena Fixed Health Clinic operated in Usmani (Lewa) IDP Camp, Khas Kunar District,
hosting approximately 3,000 internally displaced persons whose homes were destroyed in the
recent earthquake. Services also extended to nearby host communities and returnee families with
limited access to public health facilities.
The clinic functioned as the primary accessible health point for the camp population, particularly
during winter when travel to distant facilities is restricted.

 

Objective:

To provide free, accessible, and equitable primary healthcare services to earthquake-affected displaced populations and vulnerable host communities, with a strong emphasis on women, children, the elderly, and patients with chronic illnesses, especially during the winter season when respiratory and seasonal diseases increase.

 

Service delivery model:

The program followed a fixed-clinic service model delivering:

Integrated primary healthcare consultations
Maternal, newborn, and reproductive health services
Chronic disease management
Mental health and psychosocial support
Preventive health education and hygiene awareness

All services were provided on-site within the IDP camp to ensure continuous access to care for populations unable to travel.

Team Composition:

2 Medical Doctors (1 male, 1 female)
1 Female Midwife
1 Pharmacist
1 Driver

The multidisciplinary team ensured gender-sensitive service delivery and safe maternal care within
the camp setting.

 

Narrative

During January 2026, the Kunar Amena Fixed Health Clinic delivered continuous primary healthcare services to earthquake-affected families residing in Usmani (Lewa) IDP Camp and surrounding vulnerable communities in Khas Kunar District. Winter conditions significantly increased health risks, particularly for displaced households living in temporary shelters, reinforcing the critical importance of uninterrupted fixed-clinic operations. Throughout the reporting month, the clinic registered 1,973 beneficiaries and managed 2,182 clinical disease cases, demonstrating strong reliance on on-site healthcare services within the camp. Women and children represented the majority of patients, confirming the clinic’s essential role in addressing gender-sensitive and family health needs among displaced populations. Disease trends reflected seasonal vulnerability and overcrowded living conditions. Respiratory illnesses remained a major burden, including cough and cold, ENT infections, and pneumonia.
Chronic and stress-related conditions were also prevalent, with high numbers of peptic disorders, musculoskeletal complaints, hypertension, anemia, and psychosocial cases linked to trauma and displacement. Additional consultations addressed urinary tract infections, skin diseases, and micronutrient deficiencies, particularly among women and children living under fragile nutritional
conditions. Maternal, newborn, and reproductive health services remained a central pillar of care. The clinic continued providing antenatal and postnatal follow-up, safe pregnancy monitoring, and family planning counseling for women of reproductive age. These interventions strengthened maternal health awareness, improved pregnancy outcomes, and supported birth spacing in a population with limited access to formal maternal care facilities. Preventive health education complemented clinical services through regular 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 effectiveness in sustaining life-saving healthcare during peak winter vulnerability. Through fixed-site service delivery, maternal health support, and targeted disease management, AGCO ensured continuity of care for displaced families while reinforcing community resilience under humanitarian pressure

Disease Trends and Case Management (Nov–Dec 2025)

During January 2026, the Kunar Amena Fixed Health Clinic provided essential primary healthcare services to displaced families residing in Usmani (Lewa) IDP Camp and nearby vulnerable communities. A total of 1,973 beneficiaries were registered, and 2,182 clinical disease cases were consulted during the reporting period, confirming the clinic’s central role as the primary accessible health facility inside the camp. Among clinical patients, 885 were male and 1,297 were female, while 509 children under five and 1,673 adults received care. The high proportion of women and children reflects both demographic vulnerability and the clinic’s strong gender-sensitive service delivery.

Disease patterns were heavily influenced by winter exposure, overcrowded shelter conditions, and nutritional stress. The most frequently treated conditions included:

Pneumonia: 514 cases
Cough and cold: 370 cases
ENT infections: 275 cases
Peptic disorders: 174 cases
Musculoskeletal conditions: 108 cases
Micro-nutrient disorders: 98 cases
Acute watery diarrhea: 97 cases
Urinary tract infections: 72 cases
Gastrointestinal worm infections: 58 cases
Hypertension: 54 cases
Anemia: 53 cases

Additional consultations addressed trauma (32 cases), mental health disorders (30 cases), dermatological conditions (37 combined cases), pelvic inflammatory disease (37 cases), and eye infections (60 cases). These trends demonstrate the combined burden of respiratory disease, chronic illness, and displacement-related stress inside the camp. The data highlights the severe seasonal vulnerability of displaced populations and reinforces the necessity of maintaining fixed-clinic services for early treatment, complication prevention, and stabilization of chronic conditions

Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services

Maternal and reproductive health services remained a critical component of care in January 2026. The clinic delivered 71 maternal and newborn health
services, supporting safe pregnancy monitoring and postpartum follow-up.

Services included:

60 antenatal care visits across multiple follow-upappointments
9 postnatal care consultations
2 family planning services

These interventions provided essential pregnancy monitoring, maternal counseling, and early newborn support in a high-risk displacement environment where women have limited access to referral maternity facilities

Preventive Health and Community Engagement

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

Personal and household hygiene
Nutrition and micronutrient awareness
Winter respiratory disease prevention
Early care-seeking behavior

Regular engagement with camp residents improved awareness, reduced delays in treatment, andstrengthened community trust in health services

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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