|
Press Releases: Archives: Article 2
Health Focus/Africa: Continent's Health Systems
Collapsing
By Lewis Machipisa
HARARE, Dec 1 (IPS) - The gospel, according to
the clergy at the Bretton Woods institutions preaching the message of
economic reform, is that it is easier for a slim government to find salvation
than a fat one.
And as many countries try to adhere to this orthodoxy, governments are
transforming from centrally planned to market-oriented economies. This
shift has seen a collapse in most of the social services provided by the
governments.
Hardest hit is the health sector. There are clear indications of growing
inequities in health and health care in Africa. These indicators often
seem to be ignored and are persistently downplayed as African governments
implement policy changes that affect public health.
When Professor Norman Nyazema attends the People's Health Assembly 2000,
to be held in Bangladesh next week, his message will be: ''involve the
poor if health programmes are to succeed''.
One of the criticisms of primary health care as a route to achieving affordable
universal coverage - the goal of health for all - is that it provides
little attention to people's demands for health care, says Nyazema who
is the co-ordinator for Consumers International Regional Office for Africa
(CI ROAF), one of the conference's organisers.
Nyazema notes that as a result of this neglect, health programmes in Africa
have concentrated almost exclusively on the perceived needs of grassroots
people.
''Systems in Africa have failed because these two concepts did not match
and the supply of services offered could not possibly align with both,''
explains Nyazema, who is also with the Institute of Continuing Health
Education in Zimbabwe.
''What we now see happening is that only the simplest and most basic care
for the poor, rather than all possible care for everyone, which means
delivery to all of high-quality essential care, defined mostly by criteria
of effectiveness, cost and social acceptability.''
Nyazema calls for the promotion of equal utilisation for equal need, a
demand which would involve devising a system whereby use of health services
would be allocated ''pro rata'' with need and demand.
''A health system will have to adopt either a demand or a need stance
in order to ensure equity in health, at least at a primary health care
level,'' says Nyazema.
''The intensifying struggle around scarce health resources in many African
countries requires the recognition that equity needs to define and build
a more active role for important stakeholders in health, including communities,
health providers and funders,'' he adds.
Genuine, people-centred initiatives must be strengthened to find innovative
solutions and to put pressure on decision makers, governments and private
sector.
''Grassroots organisations in Africa need to form coalitions dedicated
to changing the prevailing ailing health care delivery systems,'' suggests
Nyazema.
This is one of the themes of the Bangladesh People's Health Assembly.
More than 1,000 NGO and health activists from 90 countries in Asia, Latin
America, Africa will be participating. The meeting is organised by activists
and health workers and will explore preventive health approaches; investigate
the effects of globalisation on health funding and policies; on the privatisation
of health, and the links between poverty and health, and war and health.
Other areas will be the issue of access to drugs, patent rights, bio-piracy,
and the politics of research funding.
While globalisation has brought with it huge benefits, some obligations
and commitments for implementation of the agreements under the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) have a negative impact on the health sector in Africa.
The cost of health services, in general, has increased beyond the capacity
of most African countries and the gap between the developing and developed
countries is widening.
A case in point is the WTO Treaty on the Right to Intellectual Property
(TRIPS) which provides that companies that register patents for products
or manufacturing processes have a 20 year protection period.
In the field of medicines, for example, this means that for drugs that
fall under TRIPS, governments may not import them from another, possibly
cheaper source or license them as necessary for public health and thus
buy them from another supplier.
For example, Zimbabwe has an essential drugs list for its major diseases.
These ''essential drugs'' are exempt from TRIPS provisions. However, many
new drugs not yet on the essential drugs list would be covered by TRIPS.
Amongst these are drugs for the treatment of AIDS related diseases, such
as AZT.
''While some argue that protecting patents will encourage drug companies
to invest in developing countries, patents raise a serious problem for
developing countries: whether the drug is covered by patent or not makes
a big difference to its price,'' says Rene Loewenson of Zimbabwe's Community
Working Group on Health.
Fluconazole is a drug used to treat AIDS related diseases, such as styptococcal
meningitis. It costs 70 US cents a day in Thailand and 20 US dollars a
day in Kenya. In Thailand it is not patent protected. In Kenya, it is.
In Zimbabwe, the drug costs the same as in Kenya.
''Trade liberalisation is increasing the marketing of harmful products
at the same time as it is limiting government rights to control it,''
says Loewenson.
''Public sector cutbacks and privatisation of health services are leaving
many poor people without access to quality health services, while the
wealthy get costly private care.''
Says Nyazema: ''today and everyday, the lives of the African people, to
a large extent, lie in the hands of health systems inherited from their
colonial masters.''
''At the time of their evolution the health care was implemented primarily
to cater for colonial administrators and expatriates, with separate or
second-class provision made, if at all, for Africans,'' says Nyazema.
''The systems so evolved, however, now have a vital and continuing responsibility
to the people throughout their life span and are crucial to the healthy
development of individuals, families and societies in Africa,'' says Nyazema.
''This inevitably makes health care a practical as well as a political
issue.''(END/IPS/lm/sm/00)
|
|