About Us
The Aga Khan Health Services operates 325 health centres,
dispensaries and other community outlets; 15 first-level referral
facilities including diagnostic centres, rural medical and maternal-care
centres; as well as six general and three women’s hospitals.
It provides or supports primary health-care services to populations
totalling one million and handles approximately 1.2 million patient
visits annually.
Building Effective Health Systems
Organised in the form of national service companies in Pakistan,
India, Tajikistan, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, these health facilities
are also linked internationally through Network-wide policies
and strategies in primary health care, clinical services, nursing
development and human resource management. Increasingly, the national
service companies are working with government health services
and other institutions to improve and build effective national
health systems. For example, in Pakistan,
Aga Khan Health
Services (AKHS) provides technical assistance to a World Bank-supported
programme to strengthen the capacity of government health services
in supporting community-based health initiatives. In Tajikistan,
AKHS is collaborating with government hospitals in Gorno-Badakhshan
Autonomous Oblast to rationalise, rehabilitate and modernise clinical
practice and nursing care. Many of these partnerships involve close
collaboration with
Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) and
Aga Khan University
(AKU) institutions.
Health-Care Priorities
The primary health-care programmes are designed to reach vulnerable
groups, especially rural and remote communities, and lower middle-income
urban families. Health promotion and disease prevention are at
the core of all programmes. While reproductive health, immunisation
and integrated management of childhood illnesses are the main
priorities, adult health (cardiovascular disease, diabetes, selected
cancers and mental health) is a sector of activity in many of
the areas served. Experience with primary health care within the
Aga Khan Development Network, where AKHS works closely with both
AKF and AKU, has confirmed the efficacy
and cost-effectiveness of primary health care in improving health
status.
In the absence of other quality providers, AKHS complements its
work in primary health care by offering curative services in institutions
ranging from dispensaries through health centres and women’s
hospitals to full-service hospitals. At each level of care, AKHS
focuses on providing services that are needed and wanted by the
community. It also aims to ensure a quality of care that significantly
raises local standards. Measures taken to improve quality include
awareness training, clinical governance, organizational audit and
accreditation, evidence-based practice, and continuing education
of nurses, doctors and other healthcare workers.
Contribution Of Volunteers
Many AKHS initiatives originally came to exist through the energy,
dedication and skills of volunteers. Both volunteers and professional
staff are essential to the functioning of AKHS today. The governance
of national service companies and individual institutions depends
on volunteers, who serve on boards and who are involved in elaborating
the policy and overall direction of the respective companies and
institutions. In many places, the day-to-day operation and functioning
of institutions are supported by service volunteers, who fill positions
that would otherwise require paid employees. In addition, volunteers
are involved at the programmatic level, as in Gorno-Badakhshan,
where physicians from North America and Europe have teamed up with
their Tajik counterparts in hospitals for regular training over
several years.
For more information, please visit the
AKDN website.