HealthCare
The article, “Irresponsible living partly to blame for
straining Uganda’s health sector” by Dan Kimosho in Daily Monitor edition of
August 23rd, 2012 needs an urgent rebuttal. Mr. Kimosho argues
fervently from a rather skewed perspective that Ugandans who get ill or those
who find themselves in need of medical care, are the ones who strain the health
care because of their irresponsible living. In his views, if Ugandans were to
live a more carefully crafted lifestyle and were to take responsibility for
their health situations, then the health care system would not be strained! He cites
examples of rampant accidents and injuries secondary to road accidents and
others.
I spent a number of years at Mulago, in the rehabilitation
department as trainee. I must state categorically clear that from my own
perspective as practitioner, the real causes of the rampant ill-health,
accidents and reasons for seeking health care services in Uganda and elsewhere are
associated with structural deficiencies at all levels of government.
I do not have to be technical in my analysis here. Take for
example road accidents. I do not have current statistics on how many people die
on Uganda’s roads or how many accidents occur in a year. But we all know that
road accidents which are completely avoidable remains the top killer and cause
of injuries as well as disabilities in Uganda. When we look at the statistics
of accidents involving boda boda, either motor-bike or regular bicycles, the
figures will stun you. Why?
There are many other situations that are inevitable and yet
the ordinary Ugandan has no power to overcome, just by merely living
responsibility. Let us look at hygiene among slum dwellers. The drainage
systems and the facilities in slums around the urban centers all over Uganda
are not adequate to contain the ever rising population. In fact, the UN has
estimated an exponential rural to urban influx in most of Africa in the face of
population explosion by 2030. It is even evident that most of the migrants end
up in low accommodation areas that are quickly transformed into squalid slums. Are
our urban planners taking heed of such significant policy matter?
Notwithstanding space limitation, both cases of increasing
road accidents, disabilities, and the surge in urban population have profound
public policy implications. These are areas that we have neglected, thus, the
failures of structures and mechanisms to regulate opportunities for safe and
responsible living.
We must agree that victim blaming is a very unfortunate and
superficial way of diagnosing a social problem. Symptoms are not causes but
manifestation, we must not forget this. The transportation infrastructure in
Uganda is very poor, as such; people have tried to navigate the system despite
its discrepancies to eke a living. Where public transits, buses, omnibuses or
taxis cannot reach because of poor roads, Ugandans will devise means to reach, inevitably.
When we see people acquire avoidable water borne diseases, or
get disabled, we must think first that they did not choose such a destiny. As
public servants, we should be critical and sensitive to causal factors to
enable us remove such barriers. I contend that the health care system has not
been expanded to meet the ever expanding and chaotic situation of human living
in Uganda today. This is primarily due to two factors; lack of political will
to strengthen the health care system and lack of healthy public policies on a
wide variety of human discourses, including transportation, housing and accommodation,
sanitation, equity and equality as well as culture and cultural practices.
Further, the health care system in Uganda is too biomedical
and we must diversify to embrace alternative practices. I have advocated for
investment in more upstream health care approach where people are given skills
to make healthy choices and decisions before they become ill. The Ugandan
system still narrowly defines health as presence or absence of infirmity, this
is very limiting.
The government should adopt health promotion strategies,
principles and practices in all its policies. Every decision we make profoundly
impacts on the health of individual or communities amidst us. When families or
communities lose their bread winners in road accidents, such event redefines
life experiences in such households and impacts negatively on the health status
of the community. The existence of socially structured inequalities and
inequities in society implies that the health of the population is thwarted. The
real problem is with us, the technocrats; we blame the victims of our
shortsightedness for their predicaments.
I contend that there
has not been a systemic and critical study of the failures of our healthcare
system in supporting its population. But any healthcare system that over relies
on biomedical paradigms are failing world over, so paradigmatic shift is
inevitable.END
Lets us see how to enact better public policies instead of victim blaming
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