Economic Development

Poverty, Economic Development, Government Policy, Inequality, International Aid

Global Health and Post-2015 Agenda: Making a Case for Vulnerable Populations

~Written by Hussain Zandam, Health Systems and Policy Researcher (Contact: huzandam@gmail.com

The health-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) has made relative progress in improving access to essential healthcare. The next step, as suggested by many professionals in the development arena, is to consolidate on the gains and address the existing wide gap in quality healthcare among populations, especially in LMICs.  This can be tackled by addressing the challenges faced by a range of vulnerable populations. Vulnerable groups are defined as social groups who experience limited resources and consequent high relative risk for morbidity and premature mortality. The group is represented by different categories of people including; women, children, elderly people, ethnic minorities, displaced people, people suffering from illnesses, people with disabilities and others. Together, these groups makes up a very significant population. For example, according to World Bank’s report on disability, PWDs makes up about 20% of world population equivalent to over billion people.

There is ample evidence confirming that access to effective health care is a major problem in the developing world. Many millions of people suffer and die from conditions for which there exist effective interventions. Vulnerable populations make up majority of these people. While some challenges are similar across different vulnerable people, others are specific to a particular vulnerable group. Selected factors to categorize groups should reflect specific subgroups of the population - such as poor rural women, or members of an ethnic minority - that require particular awareness due to their underlying social characteristics, which afford them less opportunity to be healthy than their more privileged counterparts. As a group, they also tend to be the least healthy and most probably have the most to benefit from health care. The fact that those most in need make least use of health care is widely considered inequitable.

Insufficient resources, inappropriate allocation, and inadequate quality are major impediments to the delivery of effective health care that reaches this group. The access problem cannot be solved without tackling each of these deficiencies. Even with limited resources, services should aim for equity, emphasizing the individual and their dignity rather than their merits, economic circumstances or ethnicity. Equitable access has been defined as ‘‘care that does not vary in quality because of personal characteristics, such as gender, ethnicity, geographical location and socio-economic status.  Adequate access is also linked to timeliness and the quality of services.

According to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development/World Health Organization (OECD/WHO) DAC guidelines, the development of equitable financing through increasing pre-payment and risk pooling is one of four priorities for the development of a pro- poor health system delivering quality, accessible health services to the poor. The extension of health insurance cover is a long-term goal. At low levels of development, a more feasible policy is to maintain reliance on out-of-pocket payments but to grant exemptions to groups, principally the poor, for which price is a major deterrent to use. Policy initiatives can accelerate the process, however it is important for health policies to include not only commitments to core concepts of human rights ‘for all’, but also whether for vulnerable groups in a way which takes account of their ‘vulnerabilities’.

A general strategy can be defined at the global level, while policy measures should be heterogeneous, varying with the local conditions in which they are implemented. Finally, as nations and the entire world accept more and more responsibility for the health of human beings, the discussion on ‘‘universal health coverage’’ as the successor to health-related millennium development goals, global health should have a strong focus on the health of the poor and vulnerable.

 

Poverty, Hunger, Economic Development, International Aid

Malnourishment: A Growing Concern - Food as a Weapon

~Written by Mike Emmerich, Specialist Emergency Med & ERT Africa Consultant (Contact: mike@nexusmedical.co.za)

https://twitter.com/MikeEmmerich

The number of hungry people has fallen by over 200-million since 1992, so says the 2014 Hunger Map and a report titled “The State of Food Insecurity in the World: Strengthening the Enabling Environment for Food Security and Nutrition” jointly prepared by World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

They go on to say that 805 million people, or one in nine of the world’s population, go to bed hungry each night. But in Sub-Saharan Africa, this is even worse, with one in four people suffering from undernourishment. The report says that sub-Saharan Africa faces the most severe challenges in securing its food; mainly due to sluggish income growth, high poverty rates and poor infrastructure, which hampers physical and distributional access.

It states: “In general, in Africa, there has been insufficient progress towards international hunger targets, especially in the sub-Saharan region,”

The report also says limited progress had been made in improving access to safe drinking-water and providing adequate sanitation facilities, while the region continues to face challenges in improving dietary quality and diversity, particularly for the poor. I did some work in the Southern DRC (based out of Lubumbashi in 2006) and we noted then that dehydration, was the leading cause of death in children under the age of 5. Dehydration as the result of diarrhoea, caused by unsanitary drinking water. For those who survive they are then in turn faced with stunted growth, which is made worse by poor food nourishment.

This report just published confirms that the situation has not changed in the past 8 years, limited progress had been made in improving access to safe drinking-water and providing adequate sanitation facilities. In fact the report notes, that progress has been so poor, that the WFP target of halving the number of undernourished people by 2015, will not be realised.

The report highlights the following to move forward:

1. Sustained political commitment at the highest level

2. Placing food security and nutrition at the top of the political agenda

3. Creating an enabling environment for improving food security and nutrition through adequate investments

4. Better policies, legal frameworks and stakeholder participation

5. Institutional reforms are also needed to promote and sustain progress.

Plus an integrated plan focussing on:

1. Public and private investments to raise agricultural productivity

2. Better access to inputs, land, services, technologies and markets

3. Measures to promote rural development

4. Social protection for the most vulnerable (persons and countries)

5. Including strengthening their resilience to conflicts and natural disasters

6. Specific nutrition programmes, especially to address micro-nutrient deficiencies in mothers and children under five.

As reports go it is a very good piece of work tackling many complex issues and outlining clear broad action plans. As with most reports though, I take issue with their expected outcomes, to broad, not specific and in my opinion, to broad. Its like position papers from government departments or even aid agencies. It does not tackle the problem head stating what is at fault and what needs to be done in clear action plans; to do that will require stepping on toes or worse – maybe even naming names!

Regional conflicts, greedy power hungry warlords all demanding access to food, how it is priced and distributed. This can affect when and if crops are planted, and who gets the produce, and they who sells it. Food can be and is used as a weapon, to control people or even to get votes, Zimbabwe and South Africa are cases in point.

The cost of food is then another key factor, Lester Brown wrote in 2011's “Food Issue” of the Foreign Policy magazine:/ Americans generally spend less than 10% of their income on food, but there are 2 billion people who live in poverty around the globe who spend 50 to 70 percent of their income on food/. A slight increase in the cost of food for these persons could be life or death, and the costs when they do escalate, are beyond the control of the consumer, at times manipulated by external forces, for their own (political or economic) gain.

On a sad and macabre note, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and China ventured beyond their borders in 2008 to grow grain in cheaper regions, such as Ethiopia and Sudan, where, of course, people where starving and did not get any of the planted grain.

So where to from here; I think if we cast our eyes to Burkina Faso, we might see a way out, People Power. The people need to speak and speak loudly in the only way the politicians and regional leaders will listen.

Disease Outbreak, Economic Development, Government Policy, Health Systems, Infectious Diseases, Vaccination, Research, International Aid

Politics and Medicine

~Written by Mike Emmerich, Specialist Emergency Med & ERT Africa Consultant (Contact: mike@nexusmedical.co.za

https://twitter.com/MikeEmmerich

"Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing else but medicine on a large scale"—Rudolf Virchow

Politics is defined as "organised human behaviour", thus we can postulate that Medicine is micro managed organised human behaviour, at times right down to the molecular level. If we examine the Ebola outbreak/s (globally) and how it is being managed on a macro (politics) and micro scale (medicine) we can begin to see the cracks in the system, and hopefully then move to addressing these cracks, before they begin yawning chasms that are not repairable.

The region (Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea) has had success (we could add Nigeria and Senegal to the successes) and failures in both areas. Neither is Spain and the USA exempt from this analysis as can be noted from the various press releases (government and medical) over the past few months.

Since the first outbreaks in 1976 (Sudan and The DRC) till the current one in West Africa; care has generally been palliative and symptomatic, questions have often been asked during this period; What of a vaccine and/or other means of treating the infected patients? There was a report in the British Sunday Times (12/10/14), cited a Cambridge University zoologist as saying that “it is quite possible to design a vaccine against this disease” but reported that applications to conduct further research on Ebola were rebuffed because “nobody has been willing to spend the twenty million pounds or so needed to get vaccines through trial and production”. Globally this has been one of the failures of the pharmaceutical companies, and most probably even the WHO, for not pushing harder over the years to get this in motion.

In her 1994 book /The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance http://lauriegarrett.com/#item=the-coming-plague, //Laurie Garrett warned that there are more than 21 million people on earth “living under conditions ideal for microbial emergence.” http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/science-mutating-microbes-1601604.html Garrett when on to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1996 for reporting on Ebola. In 1995 Joshua Lederberg, the American molecular biologist said: "The world is just one village. Our tolerance of disease in any place is at our own peril. Are we better off today than we were a century ago? In most respects, we're worse off. We have been neglectful of the microbes, and that is a recurring theme that is coming back to haunt us."

Jump forward to the 23^rd of September 2014, US President Obama issued an unprecedented ‘Presidential Memorandum on civil society http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/23/presidential-memorandum-civil-society’ recognising that: Through civil society, citizens come together to hold their leaders accountable and address challenges that governments cannot tackle alone. Civil society organisations…often drive innovations and develop new ideas and approaches to solve social, economic, and political problems that governments can apply on a larger scale./

If we look at the current crises in West Africa civic leaders are what is missing, hence the inability to track and trace potential infected persons, motivate communities to change risky behaviours (handing of the deceased), agitate with government to create better health care systems, this all adds fuel to the fire of the current epidemic.

Have we listened and learnt as governments, NGO's and Multinational Pharmacare companies since then?

Despite Medical Advances, Millions Are Dying, this is a banner from 1996, not 2014! from the WHO, which was "declaring a global crisis and warning that no country is safe from infectious diseases, the World Health Organization says in a new report that diseases such as AIDS, Ebola, Hanta, Mad Cow, tuberculosis, etc., killed more than 17 MILLION people worldwide last year”.

As Laurie Garrett wrote in her the closing section of her book, The Coming Plague, /“In the end, it seems that American journalist I.F. Stone was right when he said, ‘Either we learn to live together or we die together.’ While the human race battles itself, fighting over ever more crowded turf and scarcer resources, the advantage moves to the microbes’ court. They are our predators, and they will be victorious if we, Homo sapiens, do not learn how to live in a rational global village that affords the microbes few opportunities. It’s either that or we brace ourselves for the coming plague.” Time is short.

The Ebola outbreak in West Africa is “unquestionably the most severe acute public health emergency in modern times,” Dr. Margaret Chan, the director general of the World Health Organization, said Monday 20/10/2014). We do seem to be going in circles... circa 1995.. have we learnt nothing from history.

Sooner or later we learn to throw the past away History will teach us nothing ~Sting – Musician, singer-songwriter
Where have all the people gone, long time passing? Where have all the people gone, long time ago? Where have all the people gone? Gone to graveyards, everyone. Oh, when will they ever learn? Oh, when will they ever learn? ~Pete Seeger - American folk singer and activist