Anda di halaman 1dari 3

Dying For Doctors

Issue 182 new internationalist issue 182 - April 1988 Dying for doctors 'Medicine is killing our babies,' complained Filipina mothers, David Werner investigated their claims - and discovered they were justified. The health workers were eager. They demonstrated their 'baby-weighing' scheme, complete with animated health talks. Then, sitting down under a giant fig tree with the mothers and children of the village, they boasted of the dramatic fall in child deaths and reduction in malnutrition over the past two years. It had happened since their community health program began here in Makipawa, on the outskirts of Tacloban City. Their regular health talks to the mothers on nutrition and hygiene were to thank, they suggested. 'Nonsense!' retorted the mothers. Nurses and health officers had been telling them how to feed and care for their children for years. 'If our children don't get much to eat,' said one mother angrily, 'it's because our pockets are empty - not our heads!' 'Do you earn more money now than you did two years ago?' we asked. The women shook their heads. Prices had risen faster than wages. 'Then why are your children healthier now?' we asked. No-one had an answer. We asked the mothers how much of their family's earnings they usually spent on health care. It averaged between 10 per cent and 12 per cent: quite low compared to many poor families in Asia, Africa and Latin America, who often spend up to half their earnings on health care. 'We used to spend a lot more,' explained one mother. The others agreed: before the program started, they had often spent 40 per cent or more of their earnings on medicines. 'Our little ones used to be so skinny they were always getting sick,' said one mother. 'We'd go to the shaman, then the pharmacist, then the doctor. They'd sell us all sorts of potions and medicines. What the doctor prescribed sometimes cost us a month's wages!' 'But why do you spend less now?' we asked. 'Because we make a lot of our own medicines,' was the answer. Part of the community health program has involved families in collectively producing their own herbal medicines for treating common problems like colds, coughs, scabies, worms and diarrhoea. These are based on traditional home remedies with an input from modern medical science. The local herbal treatment for diarrhoea, for instance, has

become the basis for an oral rehydration therapy solution. And their cold remedy includes 'bitter orange' extract to provide Vitamin C. 'What we used to spend on medicines and doctors we can now spend on food. Our children are fatter so they don't get sick so often. That way we spend even less on medicines and can feed them still better!' 'Do you realize what we're saying?' asked one older woman whose face reflected a lifetime of hardship. 'We're saying it was the doctors and their medicines that were killing our babies.' 'That's a bit extreme,' objected one of the health workers mildly. 'What you mean is that the high cost of commercial and professionally-controlled health care contributes to the hunger and poor health of your children.' 'It comes to the same thing!' muttered the woman. 'The wolves grow fat on our children's flesh.' This account demonstrates how costly medicine can actually increase ill-health. And it gives some indication of how people's confidence and understanding can be heightened when they have control over the things they need for survival. But even when the medicine is given out freely in government clinics, people's sense of control over their health care may still be the crucial factor in maintaining their wellbeing - as the next example demonstrates. Diarrhoea is the biggest killer of children living in poverty. The children die, not from the infection causing the diarrhoea, but because they lose too much water. This dehydration can usually be prevented (or corrected) if a child with diarrhoea is given lots of liquid. The best rehydration drink contains sugar or starch, a little salt and, if possible, a bit of potassium. The United Nations' Children's Fund (UNICEF) estimates that deaths from diarrhoea could be halved if mothers learned how to rehydrate their children. But the death rate from diarrhoea in the world's poorest communities is 200 times that in Sweden or Holland. Therefore oral rehydration therapy, as the treatment is called, is only a stopgap measure. To eliminate diarrhoea as a major cause of death means correcting the underlying causes: poverty, malnutrition, unhealthy living conditions. This, in turn, requires major social changes which are only likely to come about through empowerment and mobilization of the disadvantaged people whose children are dying. This concern has triggered a heated debate about how to promote oral rehydration. Should it be done in ways that make people more self-reliant? Or in ways that increase their dependence on centralized services, supplies and authority? The controversy focuses on whether to use factory-produced packets of oral rehydration salts (ORS) or home-made rehydration mixes. The commercially-produced packets have been strongly promoted by UNICEF, the World Health Organization, the US Agency for International Development and most

governments. Millions have been spent setting up ORS factories in poor countries and the packets are usually distributed through health centers. Home-mix ORS, which can be made by adding a handful of sugar and a pinch of salt to a glass of clean water, has been shown to be just as effective as ORS packets. More effective still are cereal-based home-mixes, made with rice, maize, millet or whatever basic grain is in the house. Even coconut water can be used. Home-mixes are cheaper, can be adapted to local traditions and allow mothers to begin the treatment as soon as the child falls ill. When people discover they can have control over some aspects of their wellbeing, they gain confidence to work collectively for more fundamental changes. Thus a simple technology like oral rehydration can become a real stepping-stone toward a healthier society.
Website: http://www.newint.org/features/1988/04/05/dying/

Anda mungkin juga menyukai