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UN in $17-mln appeal for children's health in post-IS Iraq
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Feb 7, 2018

The United Nations launched an appeal Wednesday for $17 million to rebuild essential health facilities for children in Iraq after a devastating three-year battle to expel the Islamic State group.

The UN children's fund, UNICEF, said next week's reconstruction conference for Iraq to be staged in Kuwait, with Baghdad estimating the overall cost at $100 billion, would be "a unique opportunity... to put children at the heart" of the process.

"The state of Iraq's healthcare system is alarming," Peter Hawkins, UNICEF representative in Iraq, said in a statement after a visit to the northern city of Mosul which was recaptured last July.

"For pregnant women, newborn babies, and children, preventable and treatable conditions can quickly escalate into a matter of life and death," he said.

Appealing for $17 million to help rebuild health facilities in Iraq, UNICEF said 750,000 children in the Mosul region, the worst affected in the battle against IS jihadists, were "struggling to access basic health services".

"While violence has subsided, less than 10 percent of health facilities in Nineveh governorate (of which Mosul is the capital) are functioning at full capacity. Those that are operational are stretched to breaking point," it said.


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INTERN DAILY
Women who work nights face higher cancer risk: study
Miami (AFP) Jan 8, 2018
Women who regularly work the night shift in Europe and North America may face a 19 percent higher risk of cancer than those who work during the day, said a study Monday. These heightened risks were not apparent among female night-shift workers in Australia and Asia, said the meta-analysis in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention. "Our study indicates that night shift work serves as a risk factor for common cancers in women," said study author Xuelei Ma, an oncologist at the ... read more

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