SOCIETY — April 17, 2026
OCHA Reports Health Services Provided to Over 6,000 in Flood-Affected Areas of Afghanistan
OCHA has reported providing health services to about 6,300 flood-affected people in Afghanistan, confirming urgent needs for more than 31,600 out of 73,300 impacted. Multiple forms of humanitarian assistance have reached thousands, though infrastructure damage and funding shortages continue to pose challenges.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — corroborated by Hasht-e Subh — 2 min read

Recent heavy rains and floods that occurred between April 7 and 16 have caused extensive damage across vast areas of Afghanistan. The disasters have led to hundreds of people being killed and injured, with thousands of homes destroyed or damaged. Hundreds of kilometers of roads and several bridges have also been damaged, along with significant harm to agricultural lands.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has stated that basic health services have reached approximately 6,300 people in the flood-affected regions. The assistance included emergency medical care, maternal and child health services, nutrition support, vaccinations and psychosocial aid.
According to the OCHA update, out of 73,300 individuals initially identified as affected, more than 31,600 have confirmed urgent needs. Assessments are continuing in 75 areas across the country. To date, over 12,000 people have benefited from some type of humanitarian assistance.
The World Food Programme (WFP) has delivered food aid to nearly 2,600 families, supplying each with two months of rations. Cash support was provided to 97 families in the western province of Herat. Additionally, water and sanitation services reached 733 families, 160 children underwent malnutrition screening, and protection services were offered to more than 2,200 people.
The flooding has also led to heightened protection risks for around 14,000 people, including potential increases in gender-based violence, child labor and mental health problems.
Despite the aid delivered, substantial challenges remain. These include damaged infrastructure, difficulties accessing some communities, delays in data collection, shortages of funding and resources, and logistical hurdles. Humanitarian agencies continue to work on addressing the most urgent needs in the affected regions.
Read the original reporting at Amu TV →
Reliability assessment
OCHA is a named authoritative source directly providing the figures on health services and needs assessments; the core attribution is corroborated by two independent outlets (Amu TV and Hasht-e Subh) with no conflicting reports on the existence of OCHA's update. CurrentReliability is already at the highest level and is maintained.
The source language reads straight.
Independent web corroboration
An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.
Across the newsrooms
Where reports agree
- Recent heavy rains and floods caused hundreds of deaths/injuries, destroyed thousands of homes, damaged infrastructure and farmland across Afghanistan
- OCHA has reported on humanitarian needs and response, with health services provided to over 6,000 affected people
- Tens of thousands of people identified as affected with urgent needs confirmed for over 31,000; multiple forms of aid (food, shelter, nutrition, protection, WASH) distributed to thousands
- Significant ongoing challenges including access, infrastructure damage, funding shortages, and risks of gender-based violence and mental health issues
Filed by 2 outlets
Amu TV
Originating
Reported straight
Reported straight
Hasht-e Subh
Reported straight
Reported straight
Filed under
Society — Floods, OCHA, Humanitarian Aid, Afghanistan, Natural Disasters
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