Saturday 30 June 2012

Obama healthcare law, a victory for all Americans


President Obama has described the US Supreme Court's ruling on the healthcare bill as "a victory for people all over this country".
The US president said the law provide more security for people in America.
"No illness or accident should lead to any families financial ruin", he added.
He declared that he has been pushing the health care plan because of he believes that it is beneficial to all Americans and not because of politics.
By this law, all Americans are required to obtain health insurance or face a penalty.
Read more

Thursday 28 June 2012

Unresolved doctors strike and Violation of Human rights in Tanzania









    Dr.  Ulimboka Stephen, the coordinator of doctors welfare committee was kidnapped and attacked by unknown people (allegedly state secret agents) yesterday .He was severely injured after being attacked by the abductors.  He has been admitted at Muhimbili National Hospital and he is improving.                                                                                                      Doctors in Tanzania went into strike on Saturday accusing the government of failing to keep its promises of the bargaining that ended a month long strike earlier this year. The committee called for a country wide doctor’s strike due to poor working condition and pay after failed consensus with the government. The go slow has spread all over the country affecting the referral hospitals.
The government has not issued any statement on the doctor’s strike and the attack of chairperson of the committee. More information can be found on the Citizen newspaper.

Tuesday 26 June 2012

"I made it a resolution to go down with as many men as possible





  
text KENYA:(PlusNews) - Jane Nyasuguta*, 40, a former teacher living in Nyanza Province, western Kenya, thought she and her husband had a good marriage until she discovered he had a mistress in a neighbouring town. She told IRIN/PlusNews that after his death from an AIDS-related illness, and her discovery that she too was HIV-positive, she was filled with resentment.

"When we first married, we were a very loving couple. We had started life together from scratch; we pooled together our little resources to build a wonderful family together because we were both receiving very little salary from the government.

"I thought we were both very faithful to each other; I had no reason to suspect that my husband had a mistress outside our marriage. In 1999, he was promoted to be a head teacher and I thought that would make us happy even more, but it was never to be.

"He started coming home late, drunk, and at times was very abusive both emotionally and physically. Then it became worse and he would stay away from home for close to one week.

"I was dejected even more when I realised he had a mistress in Isebania township, near the Kenya-Tanzania border. He became sick around 2000 and he later died in 2002 of tuberculosis.

"Immediately after his death, I went for an HIV test because I wanted to be sure. I was shocked when I realised I was positive. I knew I had got the disease from my husband and I made it a resolution to go down with as many men as possible, even very young boys in high school.

"The disease finally put me down, and I was almost dead when a friend of mine took me to hospital, where I was introduced to ART [antiretroviral therapy].

"When I regained strength, what I had done haunted me - I was destroying people's future and families, yet they never sent my husband out to go and get the disease.

"I resigned from my teaching job, and together with my friend we formed a network of widows to sensitise people on the need to know their status, and even go public about it.

"The past is behind me, but it still haunts me, especially the young boys I took to bed because of a problem within my family that they knew nothing about.

"I pray every day that God will forgive me for what I did. But I also advise the young girls I talk to, if possible, to stay out of marriage because men can be sly."

ko/kr/ks/he

*Not her real name
This feature is used with permission from IRIN/PlusNews - www.plusnews.org

Thursday 14 June 2012

Health insurance cover is increasing among the Tanzanian population but wealthier groups are more likely to benefit

Health insurance coverage is increasing in Tanzania.The wealthier groups are more likely to benefit than their counterparts.
  • Richer groups are covered by a wide range of health insurance schemes while poorer groups are covered by the Community Health Fund.
     
  • Insurance increases the intensity of outpatient care use especially for those aged between 5 and 50 years and influences where people go for care, diverting people from informal drug shops to formal care.
     
  • Increasing the availability of  affordable insurance options for poorer groups and ensuring greater consistency in the benefits offered across schemes would help to improve health system equity.
 To read the full article click here

Tuesday 12 June 2012

First Pan-African Health Journalism Network Created


  
 Bellagio, Italy—Journalists from across Africa announced the creation of the first continent-wide professional association of health journalists.
The new organization, the African Health Journalists Association, aims to improve the quality and quantity of reporting on health issues so that people across the continent can make healthy choices for their lives. The group’s media coverage will encourage the best possible public health programs and policies throughout the continent.
The association will create a digital network with online learning, the latest data visualization tools, and techniques for multimedia storytelling. It will serve as a one-stop source of health experts, resources, and journalists who will collaborate on cross-border stories. The association will provide training for its members in everything from investigative health reporting to data mining. On a new website and social network, members will share reporting and writing strategies.
 “This network will take health journalism to a new level of professionalism and cooperation in Africa,” said Joyce Barnathan, president of the International Center for Journalists, which organized the meeting at the request of African journalists. The Rockefeller Foundation sponsored the four-day gathering at its conference center in Bellagio, Italy.
A steering committee of journalists from South Africa, Zambia, Uganda, Mozambique, Ethiopia and Kenya selected Declan Okpalaeke, a respected Nigerian journalist, as its chairman to launch the new association. Okpalaeke, a winner of CNN’s African Journalist of the Year Awards for his coverage of health, science and the environment, is a Knight Health Journalism Fellow.
“We believe the African Health Journalism Association will serve as a gateway to all of Africa for organizations wishing to promote health and support health journalism,” said Okpalaeke. “By pooling resources, we can provide more journalists with a richer array of training and tools than ever before.”
Zarina Geloo, a former Knight Health Journalism Fellow and a media consultant based in Zambia, will serve as vice-chair. Joy Wanja, a science and health reporter at the Daily Nation in Nairobi, Kenya, was named secretary. Health-e Managing Editor Kerry Cullinan is a member of the steering committee.
The pan-African health journalism association will encourage the formation of national health journalism groups in Africa, building on the success of associations in Uganda, Zambia and Kenya. These organizations were established with help from Knight International Journalism Fellows. The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation support the fellowships.
Those interested in joining the association are strongly encouraged to join the Facebook group “African Health Journalists Association”.

Monday 4 June 2012

Information or Disinformation: in the Eyes of the Beholder?


Simon Collery

I am in sympathy with the popular notion that people in developing countries need access to information, especially about health and other matters that profoundly affect their lives. But I wonder how people are to filter out the noise and only act on the information that really is to their benefit. How are people to know the difference between truth and lies, usage guidance and sales pitch, campaigns to promote health and campaigns to fulfill the sordid aims of some overfunded eugenicist (for example) or a power crazed imperialist? You could spend a lifetime doing some of these.

Take for example the CIA's fake polio vaccination drive to get Osama Bin Laden's DNA: clearly this had nothing at all to do with health, but was related to the aims of the very people who trained and supported Bin Laden for a long time. But how can anyone tell? Organizations that started out as overtly eugenicist later became covert eugenicists and many of them went on to be some of the biggest recipients, first of 'reproductive health' funding, at least some of which consisted of aggressively marketing various birth control methods, then of HIV 'prevention' funding, some of which consisted of, well, pretty much the same thing.

Aggressive marketing of Depo Provera and other injectable hormonal contraceptives is just one of the more recent campaigns that is based on a highly questionable mix of information, disinformation and sales puff. Mass male circumcision campaigns are similar: people have been told all sorts of things and the result seems to be terrible confusion. Research in Zambia and Swaziland finds that many men and women don't actually know the difference between a circumcised and an uncircumcised penis, even when they are shown pictures. Yet those who have been circumcised are said to have given their 'informed consent'.

Even comfortably off, well educated people in Western countries seem to be confused. Dubious arguments about circumcision reducing men's risk of being infected with HIV through heterosexual intercourse are understood as also meaning that women are partially protected, even though research has shown that it actually increases the risk to women. Arguments for mass male circumcision campaigns for sexually active adults, who may possibly be able to give their consent if given correct information (which is unlikely to happen), are used for infant circumcision. But infants tend not to engage in heterosexual sex and are unlikely to do so for many years. As adults they may be able to give their consent to the operation, though possibly with as little likelihood of that consent being informed as it was for their parents.

Apparently some bright spark has introduced 'moonlight circumcision' on the border between Kenya and Uganda. Voluntary Counselling and Testing clinics have been providing moonlight services for some time but they tend to attract a lot of people who have had a few drinks first. The notion of pressganging comes readily to mind. The excuse is that it's for people who have to work during the day. One of the 'mobilizers' is quoted as saying "It's encouraging to note that chiefs, their assistants and church priests have also presented themselves, albeit secretly". Are the priests so misinformed that they think they can have risk free unprotected sex once they are circumcised? Or do they think they are at risk even though they are celibate?

The mobilizer also "urged the youth to remain faithful to one partner, use a condom, abstain from sex and know their HIV status", which suggests that he is not very familiar with the published literature that claims circumcision reduces the risk of being infected with HIV: firstly, the literature assumes, as the mobilizer does, that all HIV transmission is sexual; secondly, that the level of protection is high when it is actually very low (1.3% absolute risk reduction); thirdly, the research also found that correct penile hygiene gives far better protection than circumcision, etc, you get the point.

Much of what is dressed up as health promotion is really just some kind of propaganda, from those who believe population control is the key to development, those who want to sell pharmaceutical products that they find difficult to shift back home (injectable Depo Provera), those who recognize the damage that genetically modified organisms can do, but also the profits that can be amassed, and those who really don't give a damn about the ill-effects of their programs (Tuskegee, mass male circumcision) as long as they get to satisfy their own needs, however pathological.

Clearly, getting information out is not the only problem. I met people in Kenya who had heard all about agricultural products that cost very little and are guaranteed to give high yields every year, no matter what the prevailing conditions are, all from someone working from a company called Syngenta. It clearly matters who is providing the information, or even access to it, why they are doing so and what ulterior motives they may have. Not that it's always wrong for them to have ulterior motives, but it's hard to evaluate the information without knowing such things.

So it remains to be seen whether access to information campaigns will result in a free-for-all of 'providers' hawking their infomercials dressed up as training courses, free samples designed to get people hooked on things they don't need and can't afford, evangelists selling salvation, or worse, get rich quick schemes, technocrats, quacks, supremacists, megalomaniacs, pseudo-philanthropists, etc, which is the status quo but with better delivery channels, or something else entirely. What kind of information provision campaign can avoid these pitfalls?

[For more about non-sexual HIV transmission, circumcision and injectable Depo Provera, see the Don't Get Stuck With HIV site.]