Years after the end of the civil war and
despite a multi-million dollar aid budget,this
small West African country of sierra leone is heavily dependent on foreign aid, particularly
from the UK - with over 60% of its budget supplied from abroad. It is estimated that up to 40% of the population remain traumatised by the war, yet the country has just one trained psychiatrist. Despite the aid there is little basic infrastructure, and the largely privatised healthcare system is beyond most people's means, forcing them to seek alternative, potentially dangerous healthcare, such as witch doctors. The healthcare system was largely destroyed in the war along with much of the other vital infrastructure. Now the Sierra Leone government is struggling to improve facilities - many of which were burnt down or destroyed. In some areas there is a skeletal system in place, heavily subsidised by foreign aid, and supplemented by healthcare charities and aid agencies. Foreign non-governmental organisations supply 60% of the Ministry of Health's budget, and spend almost double the amount the government spends on healthcare. But the system the Government has developed is largely privatised - meaning that patients are charged a fee for treatment they receive. When 70% of the population live below the poverty line, and 26% live in extreme poverty the costs are all too often seen as an unaffordable luxury. Children, pregnant women and the elderly are all supposed to receive free treatment but in practice that doesn't always happen. So for many people in Sierra Leone other forms of care have become the norm. I was taken to visit a local witch doctor, Pa Bassi, on the outskirts of Freetown. The two hour journey to get to his mud built house is regularly undertaken by those who come to visit him. On the day I visited he told me that he had 10 patients waiting to see him. He specialised in the treatment of mental disturbances. It has been estimated that up to 40% of the population of Sierra Leone have been traumatised by the effects of the war and require psychiatric help. But the country has only one psychiatrist, and only one mental hospital. Only the very disturbed are admitted - so for the many people suffering from less severe mental illness, there is no-where else to go. Pa Bassi offered to show me one of his standard treatments. It was perfume. At the side of his house his patients waited. Because they were mentally disturbed, many of them had been restrained - chained to heavy objects to prevent them from running away. Pa Bassi demonstrated - pouring perfume in the eyes of two of the boys waiting to be seen. This, despite their screams, he claimed was good for the brain - as it cleared out the system. So great is the stigma of mental illness, that people leave their relatives with him, and sometimes never return. My translator told me that Pa Bassi was a humanitarian because he saw patients without charge. A woman I spoke to had paid for treatment by giving vegetables in return. In a country which is so desperately poor it is little surprise that such forms of health care flourish. People I met in Sierra Leone wonder when life is going to get better. With so much foreign money being committed here one can only hope it is soon. World Health Report 2011, Mental Health: New Understanding, New Hope, is available at www.who.int/whr/2001/e sierra leone health situation
400,000
patients, one psychiatrist
400,000 mental patients count on Sierra Leone's only psychiatrist or
ineffective traditional medicine for treatment. Dr. Nahim uses controversial
methods, but do people have the choice? (Report: I.Taoufiki)
Sierra Leone’s civil war was one of the bloodiest conflicts in recent African history. It ended in 2002 but the invisible wounds of war are still raw. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), there are 400,000 mental health patients in Sierra Leone as a result of the conflict. Psychiatrists and psychologists treat only 2% of the ill, while the remaining 98% are treated by traditional doctors. Six years after the official end of the war, health conditions in the country are deplorable. The psychiatric sector is in especially bad shape. France 24 met with patients of Dr. Nahim, the only psychiatrist in the only psychiatric hospital in Sierra Leone, a country with 6 million inhabitants. He lacks resources and time, and his methods can seem shocking.
Übersetzung
auf Deutsch
400.000 psychisch Kranken zählen auf der einzige Psychiater in Sierra Leone oder unwirksam traditionellen Medizin für die Behandlung. Dr. Nahim verwendet
umstrittenen Methoden, aber, haben die Menschen die Wahl? (Bericht: I. Taoufiki)
Sierra Leone Bürgerkrieg war einer der blutigsten Konflikte in jüngeren afrikanischen Geschichte. Es endete im Jahr 2002 aber die unsichtbaren Wunden des Krieges sind noch roh. Nach Angaben der Weltgesundheitsorganisation (WHO), gibt es 400.000 Psychisch Kranke-Patienten in Sierra Leone als Folge des Konflikts. Psychiater und Psychologen behandeln nur 2% der Erkrankten, während die restlichen 98% von den traditionellen Ärzten behandelt werden. Jahren nach dem offiziellen Ende des Krieges, sind die gesundheitlichen Bedingungen in dem Land zu bedauern. Die psychiatrische Sektor ist in besonders schlechtem Zustand. France 24 traf sich mit Patienten von Dr. Nahim, der einzige Psychiater im einzige psychiatrischen Krankenhaus in Sierra Leone, einem Land mit 6 Millionen Einwohnern. Ihm fehlt Ressourcen und Zeit, und seine Methoden scheinen schockierend. Further examples of how deplorabe is the heath situation in sierra leone:
(Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times)
At
Princess Christian Maternity Hospital in Freetown, Theresa Mattia, 19, is
about to undergo an emergency C-section in an operating room illuminated by
small generator-powered lights. According to the United Nations, 1 in 8 women
in Sierra Leone die in childbirth. The rate in the United States is 1 in
4,800.
(Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times)
Dr.
Ibrahim Thorlie, chief of medicine at Princess Christian Maternity, has grown
increasingly frustrated with the power outages, shortage of drugs and low pay
for his staff. Many of his colleagues left for more lucrative jobs in the
U.S. and Britain, but he chose to remain. "If I
didn't stay," he said, "who would?" (Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times)
Nurses
Ajaratu Davis, right, and Kadiatu Jalloh complain to a Health Ministry
official about the low pay for those in the medical profession. Doctors say
they often pay nurses out of their own pockets to ensure they'll show up for
work.
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Be the change you want to bring about. A person is justified by what he does, and not by faith alone. Fear is a great hindrance to human development. Knowledge conquers fear, which inhibits the utilization of our utmost potentials. Knowledge is power.
Mittwoch, 8. Oktober 2014
Failing health situation in sierra leone despite the huge amount of donations!!
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