Photo: Otto Bakano/IRIN. Chad’s government has pledged to boost the number of health workers and the health budget
Source: IRIN
BOKORO, 24 January 2013 (IRIN) - As darkness fell in the
central-southern Chadian town of Bokoro, the very last patient, a
listless girl, left a makeshift clinic run by Médecins Sans Frontières
(MSF) which had treated more than 4,000 children for severe malnutrition
in the area since July 2012.
“It’s good news that patients have stopped coming because we have less
malnutrition, but on the other hand it’s also bad news because that
means that since we as MSF are phasing out, access to this kind of care
is very much reduced unless a new actor steps in to support the Ministry
of Health in the longer run,” MSF paediatrician Anja Junker told IRIN.
The shacks set up for emergency malnutrition treatment by MSF now lie
empty in the compound of Bokoro district hospital as MSF ended the
programme on 21 January.
There is only one doctor at the hospital for a population of 244,000,
and it lacks the expertise, manpower and money to continue the
malnutrition treatment programme. Equally, the region’s 13 health
centres are poorly equipped and staffed, often with one nurse for
several thousand people. Only six of those health centres have cold
chain storage.
In Chad, 33 percent of children aged 12-23 months are not vaccinated
against childhood diseases, according to the UN Children’s Fund
(UNICEF). The country also has the highest rates of malnutrition in the
Sahel and West Africa region.
“Malnutrition is the main underlying cause of child mortality in Chad,”
said Bruno Maes, the UNICEF representative in Chad. “Strengthening the
health system and establishing preventive and curative measures to fight
child mortality is imperative. The strictly humanitarian approach has
its limits. It is not sustainable in the long term.”
Weak health service
There is less than one qualified health worker per 1,000 people, and the government spends only 3 percent of its budget on health.
On MSF’s last clinic day at another health centre outside Bokoro town,
the local nurse recently posted there said taking over the malnutrition
treatment programme would be a difficult task.
Apollinaire Minadji said he was “the only qualified nurse” at the Gambir
health centre which caters for a population of 12,000. “Even with the
best qualified nurse, it is a lot of work. Normally there should be two
nurses here.”
Malnutrition, which is recurrent in Chad and is responsible for more
than half of under-five deaths, is linked to lack of preventive and
primary health care, including maternal and child health care, poverty,
cyclical droughts as well as difficult access to food and safe drinking
water.
Part of the reason malnutrition is recurrent is because even when
harvests are plentiful, poor families are forced to sell much of their
harvests to repay debts incurred during the dry season, often at low
prices due to high market supply. With reduced stocks to run through the
lean period, they are again forced into debt.
“There is a lack of social protection measures for the most vulnerable
families,” said Stefano Argenziano, the MSF head of mission in Chad.
“The fundamental thing is to make the malnutrition crisis a public
health issue… There is a common narrative that malnutrition is a result
of lack of food. This is simplistic. It is not the lack of food, but the
accessibility to food.”
In addition, without nutritional programmes in the already weak health
system, child malnutrition begins even before birth as many mothers do
not have enough to eat, and lack adequate pre-natal care and nutritional
supplements. As a result, 22 percent of children in Chad are born
underweight, UNICEF figures show.
“The way the Ministry of Public Health is structured does not allow for
the proper treatment of malnutrition,” Bokoro District head doctor
Ignable Passalet told IRIN.
“The reality across the country is that the government makes an effort
to train personnel, but it is always inadequate, which means that
everywhere in the country in each health centre there is only one nurse,
and in a district only one doctor,” he explained.
“There is a link between the general weakness of the public health
system and malnutrition,” said MSF’s Argenziano. “There is a
cause-and-effect relation. A malnourished child has high chances of
contracting diseases and a sick child is also likely to become
malnourished. It’s not possible to treat malnutrition without addressing
the public health problems.”
Equipment lacking
The Gambir health centre outside Bokoro town has no running water,
hospital waste is dumped in a shallow pit and cow dung litters the
surrounding area. The delivery room has a rusty bed and vials and
syringes are left exposed.
“We don’t have adequate equipment. Even basic hygiene equipment. We use borehole water,” said Minadji, the nurse in charge.
Outside the clinic, under a sloping roof annexe to the main building,
mothers have brought their children for treatment for malnutrition. Many
of the children have largely recovered since malnutrition rates began
slowing in late 2012. At the peak of the crisis, malnutrition and other
diseases had withered the bodies of many children to the bone, doctors
said.
Some of the mothers also suffered from malnutrition and had to be given
highly nutritious peanut paste to prompt breast milk production.
“Malnutrition still exists here in Bokoro. Even though it is reduced, it
doesn’t mean that the problem is solved,” MSF paediatrician Junker
said.
Chad’s government in 2012 pledged to increase the number of public
health workers and raise health sector expenditure to 15 percent of the
budget in line with the Abuja commitment.
“This is an absolutely necessary response… It’s a crucial element that
had not been tackled in the past, but which is now being addressed.
There is a will to increase the budget and the health sector personnel.
This is positive,” said UNICEF’s Maes.