New Internationalist Issue 272
Health - the facts
Today's world is not a picture of health. Increases in longevity and improved child survival have been overshadowed by an ever-widening gap in health between rich and poor.
But there have been some gains. Eight out of ten children have been vaccinated against the major childhood killers. And between 1980 and 1993 infant mortality fell by 25% and overall life expectancy increased by more than four years.
GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Poverty, according to the World Health Organization, is the
world's deadliest disease. The wealth-health gap for under-fives is remarkable - in
some rich countries 6 out of every 1,000 children die before the age of five, whereas in
16 low-income countries the rate is over 200 per 1,000. In Niger it is 320 per 1,000.
Life expectancies are nearly twice as high in rich countries as they are in poor ones.
In five of the poorest, life expectancy will decrease by the year 2000, while in some of
the richest it will increase from around 76 to 79 years. The relationship between life
expectancy and GNP is obvious, as the chart (left) shows.
HEY BIG SPENDER
There are big differences in the percentages that governments spend on health - though the percentages translate very differently into actual money - for example, Costa Rica spends $132 per person on health but 32% of its budget while Canada spends $1,945, which is only 5.2% of its budget. Most regions in the Majority World can only afford to spend between 2% and 6% of their budgets on health, while industrialized countries spend nearly twice that amount - 13% on average.
A question of access
While more spending on health is a good thing, in most Southern countries
three-quarters of healthcare goes to the cities, whereas the majority of the population
lives in rural areas - and therefore has limited access to health services. Three-quarters
of deaths in these countries could be prevented by primary health-care, but most of the
budgets go on expensive cures.2
A significant proportion of the world's drugs are either used inappropriately or don't work.
ALL IN THE MIND
Mental ill health is at the bottom of medical priorities, with severe
conditions getting minimal care even in wealthy countries. Yet:
KILLERS
The largest numbers of deaths are through communicable and, often, treatable diseases. Combined with deaths related to childbearing they account for 40% of global deaths: 99% of these occur in the Majority World.
Former 'diseases of prosperity' such as cancer and heart disease are now equally split between the 'developed' and 'developing' world. This is mainly due to the spread of pollution and fatty diets in the South. Smoking kills three million people a year and is the largest single preventable cause of death. There are many diseases which don't always kill but which worsen the quality of life for millions. Each year, diarrhoea affects 1.8 billion children under five, and sexually transmitted diseases affect 297 million new people.
WATER TREATMENT
The majority of the world's population lacks adequate sanitation, thus
providing good conditions for infectious diseases to spread. The lack of
safe drinking water leaves the channels open for waterborne scourges.
WORKING IT IN
IMMUNITY
World goals are to immunize at least 90% of the world's children and 90%
of women of childbearing age by the year 2000. But the gains of the last
two decades are now being eroded by apathetic policies. Immunization rates
in Africa are only around 50%. Inner cities of many industrialized countries
have immunization rates lower than those in 'developing' countries. Around
2.4 million deaths of children under five are still due to vaccine-preventable
diseases. The efficacy of vaccines themselves is now under fire in the West.
All facts, unless otherwise noted, are taken from the World
Health Organization's World Health Report 1995: Bridging the Gaps (WHO,
Geneva).
1 State of the World's Children 1995 (UNICEF).
2 The Ethical Consumer: Special Report on the Pharmaceutical Industry,
No 32, November 1994.
3 Superbug: Nature's Revenge G Cannon (Virgin Books, London
1995).
4 Scrip, No 1633, 12 July 1991.
5 An Alternative Report on Trade ICDA (Brussels, 1995).
6 In Point of Fact, WHO, No 84, April 1995.
©Copyright: New Internationalist 1995
