Probably if it was one of the prerequisites to serve a certain number
(thousands in India) of people in order to get the certificate to practice
and fulfill the dream of becoming rich (since the regular oath taking seems
to be not working), this problem would not be so severe, as it shows here?







----- Original Message -----
From: "Roy, Santanu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2004 12:32 PM
Subject: [Assam] From the NY times.


>
> Deserted by Doctors, India's Poor Turn to Quacks
>
> By CELIA W. DUGGER
> HOMATAWARA, India - The sturdy little public clinic in this poor, sickly
village was locked up one recent afternoon, but that is nothing remarkable.
Rampant absenteeism among government doctors and nurses is an open secret
across India and much of the developing world, and they virtually never get
in trouble for not showing up.
>
> "Sometimes the nurse is here, sometime she's not," said Nagji Lal Pandore,
a skinny old man in a saffron turban. "Sometimes she has medicines,
sometimes she doesn't. Why take a chance?"
>
> So, like many people here, his family has turned to amateur private
"doctors" who have regular hours and plentiful medications to sell.
>
> His daughter-in-law Shanti Bai, 30, went to such a doctor for a fever six
months ago. He gave her an injection. The next day, she was dead and her
children motherless.
>
> Villagers blamed the doctor and he fled, but the heartache remains. Mr.
Pandore and his wife have broken the news to their 5-year-old grandson, but
they are still telling their 3-year-old granddaughter that her mother is
away on a trip. "She cries and cries and asks, `Where is my mother?' " he
said.
>
> India has a vast primary health care system to serve its billion people,
with clinics for every 3,000 to 5,000. But the system is often just a
skeleton. New studies have documented the startling, damaging dimensions of
chronic absenteeism - and not just in India.
>
> Researchers for the World Bank discovered through large national surveys
that medical personnel were absent from their public posts 35 to 40 percent
of the time in India, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Uganda, and about a quarter
of the time in Peru.
>
> Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Princeton,
in a detailed survey of 100 villages here in Rajasthan, in north India,
found a no-show rate of 44 percent. When combined with absences for meetings
and other work-related reasons, these vital clinics were closed more than
half the time.
>
> As the United Nations leads a global effort to prevent millions of deaths
from AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and a range of childhood illnesses, the
fissures in public health systems are emerging as a main obstacle.
>
> There is an increasingly heated debate among experts about whether
multibillion-dollar infusions of foreign aid or politically sensitive
domestic reforms are more central to repairing public health systems.
>
> What is starkly clear in India, home to more poor people than any other
country, is that the health system is both starved for resources and
desperately in need of reform.
>
> Here in the villages outside Udaipur, one of India's loveliest tourist
destinations, rough-hewn clinics for the rural poor generally have no
phones, no vehicles, no running water. Most have no electricity. On a recent
day, they lacked syrup-based medicines to treat young children for fevers,
vomiting, coughs and respiratory infections. Some nurses said they had run
out of the basic pills provided by the government.
>
> India's public health spending is among the lowest in the world - $4 a
person per year, less than 1 percent of its gross domestic product, the
United Nations Development Program says. The United States spends about
$2,000 a person, or almost 6 percent of gross domestic product.
>
> But India's experience also shows that more money alone is not the answer.
India sharply increased its health spending in the 1990's, but most went for
new hiring and for pay raises to those doctors and nurses who are not
showing up for work, according to a World Bank analysis.
>
> The dramatic progress in reducing infant mortality in the 1980's slowed in
the 1990's, while mortality for children under 5 did not improve at all.
>
> The economists coordinating the research here - Professors Abhijit
Banerjee and Esther Duflo, co-founders of the Poverty Action Lab at M.I.T.,
and Angus Deaton at Princeton - will work with 120 villages and 100 clinics.
>
> They will add a nurse to each clinic and monitor attendance through a
punch clock or dated digital photographs. They also will try chlorinating
contaminated well water, fortifying flour with iron to fight anemia and
paying parents to have their children immunized.
>
> They will try each strategy in half the villages or clinics, then compare
the health of people in villages that got the help with those that did not.
What is here now is not working very well. The survey and accompanying blood
tests of villagers found that most people were scrawny and weakened by
anemia. Three out of 10 said they had trouble mustering the strength to walk
a couple of miles or draw water from a well.
>
> But when asked to rate their health on a scale of 1 to 10, most placed
themselves in the middle.
>
> "Their health is awful and their health care even worse," said Professor
Deaton, an expert on Indian poverty. "They know they're really poor, but
they don't know they're really sick. One of the things that drives some of
us to despair is that this isn't a political issue among them."
>
> In Bhomatawara, where the young mother, Shanti Bai, died, villagers say
the government nurse is often not at the clinic. On three visits to the
village, she was never there.
>
> So when Ms. Bai developed a fever, her family turned to the amateur
doctor. He gave her a shot and used the same syringe to give her
brother-in-law an injection, her husband said. She developed an infection at
the site of the injection.
>
> The next day she died. The doctor paid the family $930 before he left
town. A post-mortem found the underlying cause of her death was severe
anemia.
>
> The government nurse, Tulsi Meghwal, was located at her home in a town
about 12 miles away. She said she had given Ms. Bai iron pills a couple of
times, but declined to go to the clinic and show the notations in the
register.
>
> The only medical training the amateur doctor had was what he had picked up
doing menial work for a real doctor, Ms. Meghwal said.
>
> Because the public service is so undependable, the survey found, even the
poorest turn to private doctors or traditional healers 79 percent of the
time, spending 7 percent of their monthly budget on medical care. Four out
of 10 private doctors surveyed had no medical degree.
>
> Chronic absenteeism among government doctors and nurses is a hard thing to
stop in widely scattered villages. The clinics have no phones, so it is
impossible to check on the staff's presence with a simple call. The local
village councils are supposed to ensure attendance, but they have no
authority over the medical staff, whose salaries, transfers and promotions
are controlled at the district and state levels.
>
> No one around here could remember any doctor or nurse ever being
disciplined for failing to go to work.
>
> At the same time, there are powerful forces pulling the medical staff away
from the small, backward villages where they are assigned to work. Their
desire to see their own children well educated is the strongest. Doctors and
nurses interviewed in half a dozen villages sent their children to the city
for school. Some commuted from the city; others sent their families to live
there.
>
> "When government doctors are posted here, they want out as quickly as
possible," said Dr. Mahindra Parmar, who serves in Chhani village and has
two sons, 3 and 4. "Everyone wants to live in the city. I'd like a transfer
to Udaipur. If not, I'll have to move my children there. I'm an educated
person. What opportunity is there for my children here? If you allow them to
mix with local children, they begin to use the local bad words."
>
> The failings of both public and private health care were on display in
Dabaycha. The clinic's metal doors were bolted and padlocked one recent
afternoon. Some villagers said they did not even know a government nurse was
assigned to the village.
>
> "Sometimes she's here, sometimes she's not," said Jivi Mohan, a mother of
four who was smoothing a mixture of dung and mud on the walls of her home.
"Laxman is always there."
>
> Laxman Damor, 49, is the most popular "doctor" in the village, though he
never got past the seventh grade. The way to his house lies through wheat
and lentil fields and past grazing cows.
>
> "By and large, whoever comes to me, I give them an injection," he said.
"Often, tablets are better, but they want injections. If I don't give them
one, they'll go to someone else. I'll lose my customer."
>
> He is also liberal with the intravenous glucose drip, which gives a person
sapped by anemia a temporary sugar surge. He charges more than $2 for a
drip, in an area where people spend on average $10 a month per person for
total household expenses.
>
> A young laborer, Babu Lal, walked into Mr. Damor's courtyard, complaining
of a chest cold. He had hiked several miles. Mr. Damor immediately put him
on the examining table. In no time, the needle was out and Mr. Damor stuck
him in the hip with an antibiotic.
>
> That same afternoon, the public health nurse, Kesara Ahari, returned to
the village, saying she had been working in the fields. But she did not
unlock the clinic. She said she always works out of her home.
>
> She acknowledged she has trouble competing with Mr. Damor. He has
medicines that she does not. She does not give the injections and
intravenous drips that people want.
>
> She brought out the empty tins that should have held her stock of
medicines. She was even out of oral rehydration salts, which can cheaply
prevent dehydration from diarrhea, a leading killer of children in
developing countries. Many of those who come to her for care wind up going
to Mr. Damor to buy the pills they need.
>
> Her register showed entries only intermittently, sometimes with gaps of
almost a week.
>
> "I don't have medicines, so what do I give them?" she asked, shrugging.
"What is the point of filling the register?"
>
>
>
>
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