Title: Structural Adjustment and Ghanas Health Care System
1Structural Adjustment and Ghanas Health Care
System
- Joseph R. Oppong
- Department of Geography
- University of North Texas
- Denton, TX
2SAP - the diagnosis
- Over-bloated public service
- unwarranted state intervention in the market
- state ownership of manufacturing
- investment in social welfare programs
- crippling disease clogging wheels of market
efficiency
3SAP - prescription
- Massive currency devaluation
- Liberalization of interest rates, prices and
trade - Salary and wage freezes
- Credit ceiling and money supply controls
- Privatization of public enterprises
- Reduction of public expenditure
- Withdrawal of real or imagined government
subsidies
4SAP - prescription.
- Cost recovery - particularly health and education
- Reduction of civil service size through
retrenchment - Increased revenue mobilization - direct and
indirect taxes
5Main Argument of Paper
- SAP is producing irreversible changes in health
care -- new forms of care are emerging, public
health is suffering and expensive private care is
booming. - Decreased use of formal health system due to user
fees makes estimating disease burden extremely
difficult, prevents effective early intervention
and compounds health problems.
6Headline News Poverty diseases are increasing
- Cholera kills 48 after north Ghana flooding
- 0801 a.m. Sep 14, 1999.
- Cholera outbreak hits Kumasi (Oct. 11,1999)
- Suhum hospital records 106 cases of T.B. last
year - 19 May 99
- Cholera breaks out again in Accra
- 22nd June 99
7Cholera outbreak hits Kumasi (Oct. 11,1999)
- FORTY-TWO people have been admitted to the Komfo
Anokye Polyclinic suspected to be suffering from
cholera. - Presently, the recovery ward is congested with
some of the patients sharing beds whilst others
are sleeping on the floor and on benches. - A visit to the ward by a Graphic team revealed
the shortage of drip stands thus forcing some of
the patients to bear theirs in their hands.
8Cholera outbreak in Kumasi (Oct. 11,1999)
- Affected areas include Sabon Zongo, Moshie Zongo,
Roman Hill, South Suntreso, Bantama, Ashanti
Newtown, Aboabo, New Tafo, Asafo and Atonsu. - Two nurses at the ward are being supported by
three of their counterparts from the Komfo Anokye
Teaching Hospital. - Dr. E. Appiah-Denkyirah, Regional Director of
Health Service, who has visited the ward,
directed the nurses to concentrate on providing
treatment first before asking the patients or
their relatives to go through the procedures for
treatment and admission to forestall fatalities.
9Cholera outbreak in Kumasi (Oct. 11,1999)
- Currently, no other patients, other than those
suffering from cholera are admitted at the
Recovery Ward. - The cholera ward near the Center for National
Culture is temporarily closed down following the
use of a park near the facility as a lorry park.
10Cholera breaks out again in Accra22nd June 99
- 3 dead and 49 on admission at the Korle-Bu
Polyclinic. - Affected areas include Palladium, Chokor, James
Town, Korle-Gonno, Agbobloshie and parts of
Ablekuma. - The patients, lying on benches on verandas and
corridors, and officials of the polyclinic said
there is no ward for cholera patients who need to
be isolated.
11Cholera cases in Upper East 15, Oct. '98
- Cholera cases in Upper East region, which was
hardest hit by the recent outbreak of the
disease, are on the decline, Dr Samuel Sackey,
head of Disease Control Unit, Ministry of Health,
said yesterday. - The region recorded 1,439 cases from August 12 to
October 3, with 38 deaths.
12Ghanaians Urged To Adopt Healthy Lifestyles
- ACCRA, Ghana (PANA) - Professor Agyeman Badu
Akorsa, Chief Pathologist at the Korle Bu
Teaching Hospital, has said 80 percent of deaths
that occur in the country are preventable. - He said bacteria infection, hypertension, motor
traffic accidents, cancers and tuberculosis which
are the leading causes of deaths in that order,
could be prevented through good dietary habits,
education - He said one of the biggest problems in the
country is adult malnutrition
13Suhum hospital records 106 cases of T.B. last
year 19 May 99
- The Suhum Government Hospital recorded 106
tuberculosis cases last year. - Between January and March this year, the hospital
has already recorded 40 cases, Dr. Harry Opata,
district director of health services in charge of
the Suhum/Kraboa/Coaltar said that more cases are
expected before the end of the year. - Dr. Opata said only six TB cases were reported at
the hospital in 1991 and that between 1992 and
1997, 92 cases were reported.
14Cutbacks in health sector spending have produced
- Retrenchment - large layoffs of public service
workers. - 60,000 between 1987-92, and continue at about
10,000 per year (Sahn, Dorosh and Younger,
1997). - Salary freezes significant salary reduction due
to inflation. - 2nd jobs to make ends meet produced absenteeism.
- Closure of health facilities in rural areas,
poorer health care.
15Devaluation of the cedi produced
- Increased cost of imported drugs and medical
supplies.
16Poverty has increased
- In 1997, more than 6.5 million people (30 of
total population) lived in absolute poverty and
the poverty of 1.8 million was described as
hard-core (World Bank, 1997. - Proportion of poor increased from 43 in 1981 to
54 in 1986 and 55 in 1997. - Poverty in Accra tripled from 7 in 1988 to 21
in 1992. - Real wage reductions, rising food prices, and
subsidy cutbacks
17Malnutrition has also increased
- Reduced diet intake.
- Avoiding expensive foods such as meat, milk, and
protein foods that are high in protein. - The decreased buying power of households reduces
the amount and quality of food purchased. - Increased avoidable diseases.
18Increased health problems but reduced access to
health services
- Cost recovery, Cash and Carry system
dramatically reduced usage of formal health
facilities (by 50-80). - Increased use of illegal providers.
- Proliferation of new, profit maximizing , mobile,
versatile groups of providers (drug peddlers,
fringe dispensers, IDVs). - Increased, high quality, private care for the
affluent.
19Extremely low morale of health workers
- Low staff morale ... is as a key cause of the low
service quality in the health sector. This
maybe in direct response to the service
conditions which to a lot of health workers are
far below that of other sectors. Another
contributing factor is the limited number of
skilled staff which tends to create a high work
load for most health workers. Supervision,
monitoring and regulation of staff and service
delivery, is also inadequate (Ministry of Health
1999).
20Decaying public health facilities
- Poor maintenance of public health care
facilities. - Leaking roofs, cracked walls, faulty plumbing and
sewer systems. - Obsolete health equipment with no spare parts or
preventive maintenance programs. - (Ministry of Health 1999)
21SAP may be promoting HIV/AIDS
- Poor hygienic practices due to reduced funding
may be spreading HIV. - Limited funding for STD control increases HIV
since STDs facilitate HIV spread. - Increased poverty increases risky behavior (e.g.
commercial sex work). Malnourished, poor women
extremely vulnerable. - Increased rural urban migration may be spreading
HIV.
22Buruli Ulcer
- Ulcer with undermined borders, necrosis of the
underlying subcutaneous tissue, and a shiny hyper
pigmented patch of skin surrounding the ulcer. - Caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans.
- First identified in Accra in1971 but now in all
10 regions - 96 cases in 1989, but in 1993, 1,300 cases were
reported. - Nationwide case search mid-1999 revealed a much
higher than expected, rapidly increasing
occurrence. 256 cases in Western Region alone.
23Beginning - Nodule Stage
24Advanced stage of Buruli ulcer
25Late stage ulcer
26Late stage Buruli ulcer
27(No Transcript)
28The true extent of Buruli Ulcer disease in Ghana
is unknown
- In the Western Region, an endemic area, inability
to walk to the Asankrangwa Hospital (about 10-14
miles away) or pay the 1,000 cedis fee (then
about 0.30 US) for daily wound dressing kept
patients away. - The cash and carry system not only deprives the
sick of much needed care, but makes it difficult
to get a true estimate the burden of disease.
29Physician are getting frustrated
- After examining a very sick patient, I requested
that he should go and get a chest x-ray. The
patient told me Doctor, I have no money to pay
for that x-ray. Just give me some medicine, any
medicine to help me. Please dont let me die.
How do I provide effective treatment? I feel like
Im shooting in the dark, my hands are tied
behind my back because of this Cash and Carry
system. (Physician, Chest Clinic, Korle Bu,
Accra).
30Short gun therapy is increasing
- In the absence of appropriate laboratory tests
due to patients inability to afford them, I end
up prescribing several different drugs, shot-gun
therapy, in the hope that one of them will work. - Several times my patients tell me Doctor, I
cant afford to buy all these medications. Please
select the most important one for me so that I
can get that one. In fact, sometimes, they ask
me to prescribe partial dosage because they
cannot afford the full dosage of even one drug.
31Some physicians are becoming cynical
- How do I treat the effects of poverty and
under-nutrition? I cant feed them three times a
day! - District Medical officer.
32Conclusion
- Structural adjustment is producing irreversible
changes in Ghanas health care system leading to
the emergence or escalation of new treatment
forms and reduced access to quality health care. - Second, SAP is compounding the disease burden in
Ghana, exacerbating the existing health problems,
and increasing the difficulty of disease control
in the country.