Doctor Tony in Iraq: Health Promotion in Ashti Camp Part Two
It is time to give a face to some of the people who were involved in this process, be they patients or our relentless health promoters.
It is time to give a face to some of the people who were involved in this process, be they patients or our relentless health promoters.
In this series of posts, I want to take you on the journey of a de-worming campaign in the camps we work in, promoting health and hygiene to the IDPs and refugees that live here.
This is the third instalment in Mark's blog series. To see the previous entry, click here. Hi! My name’s Mark and I’m a British nurse who normally works in an Emergency Department in central London. I am currently on my…
EMERGENCY's commitment to building a culture of peace is being demonstrated every day in Ashti Camp.
Over the coming weeks and months, Mark - a British nurse - will be sharing his experiences from Iraqi Kurdistan.
He carried his daughter to our clinic in the Ashti camp. Her clothes and hair were still on fire.
She arrived at the Ashti refugee camp with almost all her family.
As they change the bandages on his hand, Darwood Salim raises his fingers in a victory sign.
On the 8th of March 2017, Darwood, aged 12, had been tending sheep just outside Mosul when he stepped on a landmine.