For those who have learned so much from
those in Haiti
Bonnie Y. Elam
The Haiti Connection
206 New Bern Place
Raleigh, NC 27601
001 (919) 786-4478
From:
info.haiti-bounces@... [mailto:info.haiti-bounces@...] On Behalf Of Kyn Tolson
Sent: Wednesday, September 05,
2007 9:19 AM
To: info.haiti@...
Subject: Haiti Info: Dr. Paul
Farmer on health care in Haiti and elsewhere
To our list serve
readers:
Many of you have long
been familiar with Dr. Paul Farmer. His name and the stories of his work in
Haiti became well known a few years ago with the publication of his biography,
written by Tracy Kidder, “Mountains Beyond Mountains: Healing the World: The Quest of Dr.
Paul Farmer.” (Mountains beyond mountains is, by the way, part of a
Haitian proverb.)
The following is an opinion piece Dr.
Farmer wrote for the Forbes Web site.
Commentary
Dr. Paul Farmer
09.04.07, 6:00 PM ET
www.forbes.com/opinions
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Paul Farmer |
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I was
lucky enough to make my first trip to
Working
there taught me several things: that all enduring, good work is done by teams
(no doctor can be effective alone); that public health and public
infrastructure is always important (even the biggest and most beautiful mission
hospital cannot serve the people of an entire region, much less a nation); that
community-based care, relying on village health workers is the secret to
success for programs for chronic diseases, including AIDS and tuberculosis;
that some services should not be sold, even for the tiniest price, because
there will always be some who cannot pay these "users' fees," as
they're called, and the ones who cannot pay are precisely the people we came to
serve in the first place. These are also the people who are, often enough,
hungry. There's only one treatment, we learned, for that affliction: food.
With
these hard, if obvious, lessons came great success for small projects, but also
a haunting doubt: Could quality (and comprehensive and complex) health services
ever be "scaled up" in some of the poorest countries in the world?
The very countries needing such scale up most?
Over the
past decade, our work in
We still
work throughout central Haiti but have also worked in seven other countries,
pursuing, along with thousands of others, two goals in tension: high-quality
health care for the patient in front of us, but thinking, whenever possible, of
the tens of millions more who need the same services.
The
tension is still there, and scale up remains an elusive goal when comprehensive
care is the deliverable. It's one thing to have a national vaccination
campaign--easily enough done--but quite another to rebuild public
infrastructure, offer care for maladies ranging from AIDS to obstructed labor
(which requires, of course, a Cesarean section, which in turn requires
electricity and an operating room and someone who can perform the procedure),
and to recruit and train that army of community health workers. It's hard, but
not impossible. The potential health workers are there wherever there is rural
unemployment; but they have to be paid if they're to dedicate most of their
time to this important, lifesaving work.
In 2005,
together with the Clinton Foundation and the Government of Rwanda, we were
invited to two rural health districts counting close to half a million people.
There were no doctors in these districts. "Can you scale up a Haiti-style
project there?" they asked. We thought we could, and two years later I
think we have.
Then came
the tension, this time followed by hope and excitement: Could it be that in
this small, mountainous nation of over 8 million people we could scale up a
rural health model for all Rwandans, over 80% of whom live in rural regions?
Why believe it possible there more than elsewhere? What was in
First,
there was good governance, security and a great deal of what's termed
"political will": that is, the government
wanted these services to be available to all Rwandans. Second, although
After
working all of my life in global health, I've been lucky to work on small
projects that have grown; to have worked on specific efforts (such as the treatment
of multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis in
But here
in
Dr.
Paul Farmer, the Presley Professor of Medical Anthropology in the Department of
Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, is the founder of Partners In
Health.
--Interviewed by Sonia Narang
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