Japan has extended grant assistance of JPY 3,445 million (approx. $31.4 million) to Pakistan for the extension of maternal and child health care facilities in Sindh.
Notes to this effect were signed and exchanged between Matsuda Kuninori, Ambassador of Japan to Pakistan, and Zulfiqar Haider, Additional Secretary of the Ministry of Economic Affairs. Subsequently, the Grant Agreement was signed and exchanged between Furuta Shigeki, Chief Representative of JICA Pakistan Office, and Syeda Adeela Bokhari, Joint Secretary of the Ministry of Economic Affairs.
Under this project, a new maternal and child health center will be established at Liaquat University of Medical & Health Sciences (LUMHS), Jamshoro, which is a public medical institution serving as the regional hub hospital in Hyderabad district. The maternal and child health center would have the departments of obstetrics and pediatrics, including a labor room, an obstetrics ward, a neonatal intensive care unit, a maternal and fetal intensive care unit, a laboratory, and outpatient consultation rooms. In addition, around 120 items of medical equipment, including newborn incubators and ultrasonic diagnostic devices are to be installed.
The project is scheduled to be completed by August 2024. With the opening of the center, access to maternal and child health services in the area will be substantially improved. For example, three years after completion, the maternal and fetal intensive care unit will have nearly 100 patients, and the neonatal intensive care unit will have more than 400 patients annually. In addition, the annual number of deliveries and outpatients will also increase significantly. As a result, local patients will not have to travel a long distance to Karachi.
For decades, Japan has put a priority on the health sector in the economic and social development of Pakistan, such as enhancement of maternal and child health, polio eradication, routine immunization, and counter-COVID-19 measures.
In the last decade before the project in Jamshoro, Japan has implemented the following projects in Karachi and Islamabad in terms of maternal and child health:
• The Project for the Extension of Intensive Care at Maternal and Child Health Care Centre and Children’s Hospital in Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) (April 23, 2019, approx. $33 million)
• The Project for the Improvement of Child Health Institute in Karachi (December 21, 2012, approx. $13 million)
Furthermore, Japan has been supporting the Polio Eradication program in Pakistan since 1996. The grant and loan contribution from Japan has amounted to $226.37 million. As far as COVID-19 is concerned, Japan has extended a total of $23.5 million in grant to Pakistan for supplementing its counter COVID-19 measures as follows:
• Feb 2020: Delivery of diagnostic kits
• Apr-May 2020: Disbursement of a total of $7.41 million to UNICEF, IOM, IFRC, UNHCR, and UNOPS for providing hygiene items, training health workers, providing alternative learning opportunities, etc.
• Dec 2020: Grant Assistance of $9.5 million to NDMA for procuring medical equipment.
• Mar 2021: Grant Assistance of $6.59 million to UNICEF for improving vaccine cold-chain.
In addition to the above, Japan and Pakistan agreed on debt deferral amounting to JPY 40 billion (approx. $370 million) for making fiscal space to fight COVID-19 in Pakistan. Through JICA projects, personal protective equipment and masks were provided to PIMS, WHO Polio Laboratory (Islamabad), and immunization project workers in KP province.
Ambassador MATSUDA added,
The provision of health and medical service is the most basic human necessity in every country across the world. Among them, women and children are still in a vulnerable position, which is reflected in the high maternal and infant mortality rate in Pakistan. Japan will continue to provide assistance that will directly benefit vulnerable people in Pakistan
FURUTA also remarked,
The number of care facilities to treat mothers and babies with complications is very limited in Sindh. As a result, patients are concentrated in advanced medical facilities. This project will not only alleviate the pressure of tertiary hospitals in Karachi and Hyderabad but also open up opportunities for families from all over the southern part of Sindh, with improved accessibility and better chances of saving lives
On the same day, the Notes and grant agreement for the project of the Human Resource Development Scholarship (JDS) was also signed so that the fourth batch of the project could be commenced.
The aforementioned grant aid is worth JPY312 million (approx. US$2.9 million), which allows a maximum of 20 Pakistan Government officers to study in Japanese Universities to obtain Masters’ or Doctoral Degree. The purpose of JDS is to strengthen the Government officers’ administrative capacity through the study in Japan and to build a solid friendship as well as diplomatic relations between Japan and Pakistan.
The project started in 2018 in Pakistan and 51 persons in total have joined the project.
There are six Japanese partner universities, and the fellows are studying with Japanese/International students from various parts of the world for two or three years, depending on the type of degree they wish to obtain.
As the application for this fourth batch will hopefully be starting from Autumn 2021, it is hoped that many officers who are willing to contribute to Pakistan in formulating and implementing social and economic policies for the development of the country will actively apply for the project to make the best use of this opportunity.
Source: Pro Pakistani