By 2010 sub-Saharan
Africa will have suffered 71 million deaths due to AIDS. By comparison, the
bubonic plague of the Middle Ages killed some 30 million people. These are
staggering figures.
They are echoed by
experts at the United Nations, warning that most of the sub-Saharan countries
will be unable to reach the Millennium goals related to health set by the
international organization for 2015, such as reducing child mortality and
improving the health of mothers.
Solving Africa’s health
and development problems takes more than statements of good intention, empty
promises of aid — or movie stars’ adoption of African children. But there
definitely are ways to solve them. In fact, many diseases affecting children
and adults can be addressed with minimal resources — if they are used
strategically.
Malnutrition is a
particularly critical issue. Almost 60% of deaths of children under age five in
developing countries are due to malnutrition and its effects on infectious
diseases. Malnourished children are up to 12 times more likely to die from
easily preventable diseases (such as measles, malaria, diarrhea and pneumonia)
than are well-nourished children.
There is a vicious
circle between poverty and malnutrition, where each condition increases the
negative effects of the other.
To address malnutrition,
particularly in children, it is therefore important to educate families on
children’s nutritional needs, to ensure food security in poor households and to
protect children from infections by immunization and provision of safe water
and sanitation. It is also important to focus on poverty, which can act as a
jumping board for these situations.
According to UN
statistics, African women are ten to 100 times more likely to die during
pregnancy and childbirth than women in the industrialized countries. Most of
these deaths are caused by delays in recognizing complications, difficulties in
reaching a medical facility and lack of adequate medical care.
In addition, for every
woman who dies from complications during pregnancy and childbirth,
approximately 20 or more endure injuries, infections and disabilities.
Skilled health workers
are vital in addressing these challenges — but their numbers are pitifully low.
Equally worrisome is the distribution of healthcare workers within the
countries themselves, where they tend to remain in urban areas.
Approximately 38 out of
47 countries in sub-Saharan Africa do not meet the WHO recommended minimum of
20 physicians per 100,000 population — and 13 sub-Saharan countries have five
or fewer physicians for that same population.
To compound the problem,
the exodus of trained personnel to higher paying jobs in industrialized
countries is widespread. According to the World Health Organization, 23,000
healthcare workers leave Africa annually. It is estimated that there are more
Malawian physicians in Manchester, England, than in Malawi, a country of 12
million people with only 100 doctors and 2,000 nurses.
Both African and
industrialized countries have to agree on a set of policies to help health care
workers remain in their countries of origin or return to them to provide their
services after they have profited from learning in more developed settings.
Malaria, HIV/AIDS and
tuberculosis continue to be major threats facing both children and adults. On
the age-old issue of malaria, much of the debate is about the highly
contentious use of DDT in combating this infectious disease. It need not be the
focal point, though.
Recent experiences in
Africa and Latin America show that malaria can be controlled without the use of
DDT, an important new approach to dealing with this disease. It can be done
through rapid case detection, drug treatment and community-level actions.
The focus is on the use
of insecticide-impregnated bed nets, sanitation measures to eliminate vector
breeding sites — and using chemical substitutes for spraying houses.
Throughout Africa, the
stigma associated with HIV/AIDS remains one of the main barriers in dealing
successfully with that infection. While education, public health campaigns and
the active participation of members of the clergy have contributed in many
areas to overcoming the stigma, much remains to be done — and progress is slow.
HIV/AIDS has also had a
significant effect on the education sector. In sub-Saharan Africa, the HIV/AIDS
pandemic is killing teachers at a rate faster than replacements can be trained.
Another effect of the pandemic is teacher absenteeism, loss of educators,
planners and management personnel.
It is estimated that
close to 30% of teachers in South Africa are HIV positive, a higher rate than
among the general population. According to statistics from Zambia’s education
ministry, every day one teacher dies from an AIDS-related disease. This is the
equivalent of the closure of one school per week due to loss of teachers.
Solving Africa’s
persistent health problems requires three distinct steps: First, the
development of effective and efficient healthcare systems. Second, increasing
healthcare coverage.
And third, redirecting
resources from curative care in urban hospitals using resource-intensive
high-tech equipment to low-tech community-based primary and preventive care.
To some this may be not
focused enough on basic needs, such as a necessary emphasis on putting into
place the conditions for sustainable growth.
It is a known fact that
any improvement in people’s economic status is immediately followed by an
improvement in their nutrition and health. What’s more basic and essential than
engendering economic growth?
Health problems in
Africa cannot be considered in isolation — and are not only the responsibility
of Africans themselves. Foreign technical and financial assistance is required.
To be effective, aid must bypass corrupt governments and find ways to help
people directly.
The emphasis should be
on channeling aid through non-governmental and UN organizations such as WHO,
UNICEF and UNFPA with a proven record of effectiveness, and long-standing
experience in the countries.
Aid can strengthen civil
society and community-based organizations — which are the basis of a democratic
society. To bring hope to a continent ravaged by poverty and disease, effective
action is required. It can be done #SDG3 #HealthforAll #UniversalHealthCare
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