Dr Azad expects a lot from the government to deliver on healthcare issues. He considers “public” health a “public” responsibility and takes a critical stance against privatisation. He shares his thoughts on properly regulating the medicine industry, gets wary of private-public partnerships and wants to learn from insurance schemes operational in other countries.
Certainly the government has a lot — in fact, the most — to answer for. But why is it not able to convince observers such as Dr Azad?
This, one would argue, has partly to do with each successive government’s inability to increase spending on healthcare. Here again, education saw some increase in spending — no matter if it was limited. It’s good that, thanks to advocacy campaigns, at least some spending has been increased. Not so for healthcare. Political parties often say they will spend more, but Dr Azad shows that the spending every year changes only very slightly. This is why parties that come into power mostly try to revise rules and regulations or opt for private-partnerships (as had been initiated by the Sindh and Punjab governments).
Many will respond that it is not rocket science to conclude that Pakistan needs more funds for healthcare. The problem is that this is hardly being pursued; one has yet to come across any sustained campaign on this.
Instead of increasing resources, our tack for fixing the healthcare issue is to assume that somehow, the various actors in the system are venal. Fixing the system means disciplining the medical staff for not performing their duty properly, or fining the chemist who charges a higher than listed price, and so on. Making accusations that everyone is corrupt and needs to be disciplined is our pet solution for all key policy matters, including healthcare. One only has to look around to see how popular this mindset has become. But because it is devoid of valid evidence, not to speak of the justification of such solutions, the upshot is the increasing afflictions of people and examples of these abound.
After all, without new resources in health sectors, the actors are so interconnected that the patient is going to suffer at some point or the other. Dr Azad writes that when one international donor tried to club the areas of two doctors in one — increasing the salary of one doctor by assigning him/her more than one health units — it only skewed doctor-patient numbers as the doctor only ended up seeing more than a manageable number of patients.
Also, as with many of our other fields, our approach towards health is curative, not preventive. We treat patients once they have become afflicted with disease, rather than stopping the spread of disease beforehand. Our healthcare system is, almost always, literally in the emergency department.
But this approach is not always inadequate. Individuals and organisations working for healthcare are often involved in distributing medicines or rations to those affected. Surely these noble actions are praiseworthy, too. In any case, a donor’s own self-satisfaction comes from dispensing aid to someone in dire need.
But at the same time, we need to chart a strategy of how best to allocate resources and energies to the long term responses, too. This has to be done consciously. Other than raising awareness, the government can come up with preventive programmes such as it has against polio. Dr Azad’s book essentially shares how we can get out of this ‘emergency’ mindset.
Although everyone talks about healthcare to the extent of it sounding clichéd, we lack the expertise — at least at the public level — to talk effectively about the issue. Contrast this with education, where newspapers are flooded with commentaries on reforming it and organisations are eager to work on making reforms happen.
Dr Azad himself is one of the few people writing on health and healthcare issues and this book is a compilation of the essays he has published, mostly in Dawn, over the years. After earning his medical degree, Dr Azad went on to specialise in public health. It is laudable that, in his essays, he explains what appear to be complex medical issues in plain, readable language. This, in itself, is his great contribution towards potentially opening the discussion on what ails Pakistan’s healthcare system.
The reviewer is a researcher based in Islamabad
Patient Pakistan: Reforming and Fixing Health
Care for All in the 21st Century
By Dr Arif Azad
The Iqbal International Institute for Research
and Dialogue, Islamabad
ISBN: 978-9697576395
190pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, August 4th, 2019