Photo: David Swanson/IRIN. Most Papua New Guineans believe in witchcraft
Source: IRIN
GOROKA, 5 May 2014 (IRIN) - When Mary, aged 45, got sick, residents in
her remote highland village in Papua New Guinea (PNG) did not take her
to the doctor, but to a traditional healer believed to have magical
powers.
“They said a witch had put a curse on me. They had to remove it. Had
they not brought me to the nearest health clinic, however, I could have
died,” she said. Her symptoms involved respiratory difficulties, in a
country with a high incidence of TB.
Such stories are not uncommon in PNG, a largely traditional society with
836 languages and where belief in witchcraft or sanguma as it is known
in Tok Pisin, the lingua franca, continues to undermine health care in
the country.
“People routinely delay seeking proper medical care when they attribute
their sickness or illness to witchcraft rather than natural causes,”
said Sibauk Bieb, executive manager of public health within the Ministry
of Health. “At that point, however, it can be too late.”
“Whether it’s diarrhoea, diabetes or heart attacks, people think
witchcraft is involved and are not open to a medical explanation,” said
Josephine Andreas, a registered nurse with 36 years of experience
working in PNG’s Eastern Highlands Province. “This is the biggest
problem and one deeply entrenched in people’s mind.”
“When people get sick they don’t think in terms of the medical cause,
but rather who is to blame,” said Jack Urame, director of the
Melanesian Institute (MI), an ecumenical cultural research centre in Goroka, Eastern Highlands Province.
For many, old age is the only “natural cause” of death, regardless of
what a hospital autopsy might say, according to Richard Eves, a noted
Australian anthropologist. All other deaths are invariably viewed with
suspicion.
Deteriorating health system
The problem is made worse by PNG’s deteriorating public healthcare system.
“The serious decline of health services in PNG has undoubtedly
exacerbated the degree of recourse to sorcery and witchcraft as an
explanation of illnesses and death,” Eves said.
Despite strong economic growth rates in recent years (and a projected
6.2 percent growth rate in 2014) fuelled by significant oil, gas, and
gold reserves, the country’s public health system is dysfunctional at
best.
According to the PNG Department of Health, less than half the population
has access to health care; a problem pronounced in rural areas, where
87 percent of Papuans live. Here residents are largely dependent on more
than 2,000 community health posts - the mainstay of PNG’s healthcare system - many of which have fallen into disrepair or closed due to lack of funding and corruption.
Health expenditure in PNG is US$114 per capita, the World Bank
reports, compared to $148 in the Solomon Islands, $177 in Fiji and
$6,014 in Australia, while PNG has 0.58 health workers per 1,000 people
(WHO recommends 2.5 per 1,000 simply to maintain primary care).
In the Highlands province of Ora, nearly 40 percent of all health posts
are shuttered, the authorities confirm, due to shortages in funding, and
insufficient staff, especially midwives and doctors.
At the same time, a fragmentation in institutional relationships (for
example, when some health workers at the village post level do not
recognize or fail to refer patients to hospitals or district clinics),
compounded by an unclear allocation of responsibilities for service
delivery, has exacerbated healthcare woes.
All this in a country where babies, children and mothers continue to die in large numbers from preventable causes. At 230 per 100,000 live births, PNG has one of the highest maternal mortality
ratios in Oceania region (a collective name for the 25 islands in the
tropical Pacific Ocean) and more than 3,000 percent more than
neighbouring Australia, while poor drug distribution and PNG’s largely
rural and remote population find it difficult and expensive to access
basic medical services.
Mixed messages
Fuelling the problem further is the inability of health staff to
effectively convey health messages and treatment decisions to patients
and their families in a way they can readily understand, a fact which
can further strengthen people’s belief in a universe of magic.
Doctors and nurses unable to properly diagnose a specific illness will
routinely suggest to patients and their families that their sickness
might be sik bilong ples (sickness from the village), which serves as a
code word for illnesses of magical origin stemming from social
disharmony in the village, suggesting that someone with a grudge had
caused the sickness by sorcery or witchcraft.
People distinguish between this and sik nating (ordinary sickness), which can be cured by modern medicine, according to MI.
“When delivering health messages, people need to recognize that such
beliefs [witchcraft and sorcery] exist and do impact people’s
understanding of health,” Lillian Siwi, head of health in Eastern
Highlands Province, said.