New equipment at SIUT Hospital in Karachi to benefit renal patients
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad, October
9, 2022: As part of a concerted effort to strengthen the delivery of health
services in Sindh Province in Pakistan, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency has
donated 85 state-of-the-art dialysis machines to the Sindh Institute of Urology
and Transplantation (SIUT).
The project,
funded by the European Union, is aimed at enhancing the capacity of the Renal
Unit to carry out more dialysis sessions and ease pressure on public services. Daily,
the dedicated medical team at SIUT carries out approximately 1500 dialysis
sessions. Medical services are free of charge for all patients – regardless of
their nationalities and legal status.
The equipment,
which also includes six reverse osmosis treatment systems for the dialysis
machines, along with six automated dialyzer reprocessing systems, will benefit
both refugees and host communities and save lives.
The
life-saving equipment was inaugurated at a ceremony attended on Thursday by the
hospital medical team, UNHCR, and representatives of the Government of
Pakistan.
In addition to
the 85 dialysis machines for SIUT, the European Union has also funded critical
equipment for various public hospitals in Pakistan, including a Thalassemia
Unit, a Gastroenterology Unit as well as state-of-the-art CT scanners in areas
hosting refugees.
The
contribution illustrates the commitment of the EU to supporting refugees and
host communities through a three-year funded program covering Afghanistan,
Central Asia, Iran, and Pakistan, which focuses on strengthening health,
education, livelihoods, and protection activities. The contribution builds on
EU development support for Afghans and hosts communities in Pakistan since
2018.
“Our support
today to the people of Pakistan is a gesture of solidarity and gratitude for
the decades of hospitality extended by the Government and people of Pakistan
for Afghan refugees,” noted Noriko Yoshida, UNHCR Representative to Pakistan.
“It’s important that after 40 years of hosting refugees, Pakistani communities
continue to see the international contribution towards local services and the
people who have been generously hosting refugees all this time.”
Thanking the
generous support of the EU and UNHCR, Professor, Adib Rizvi recounted the
services of the institution and said that since 1971, SIUT has been providing
quality healthcare to all patients free and with dignity and compassion.
He added that
this donation will further enable us to treat and manage more effectively, the
overwhelming kidney failure patient population.
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