Friday, August 28, 2015

Global health funding: Huge increases since 2000, but also huge disparities

This was originally published on Global Health TV on July 27, 2015.

As the end of the era of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) (2000-2015) draws near, we who work in global health can look back with some satisfaction at the $228 billion that was allocated to address the three health-related MDGs during that time.

Although spending grew rapidly in the first ten years, it was stagnant between 2010 and 2014, and actually decreased by 1.6% between 2013 and 2014. Global health funding in 2014 amounted to $36 billion in 2014 (of which $1 billion was for Ebola).

That information comes from Financing Global Health 2014: Shifts in Funding as the MDG Era Closes, the annual report of global health funding published last month by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).

And two weeks ago, the Kaiser Family Foundation and UNAIDS issued a report that showed that although there was only a slight increase in funding for HIV in low- and middle-income countries in 2014 (less than 2%), seven of 14 donor countries actually decreased funding despite the recent gains made against the epidemic.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

In Africa, gap between need and funding of mental health is huge

Adolescent boys in talk therapy group near Kampala, Uganda. Credit: StrongMinds
This was originally published on Global Health TV on June 29, 2015.

Sean Mayberry has spent his entire life surrounded by mental illness. As a child and an adult, people close to him have endured this affliction. But he had an epiphany when he happened upon a young man behind a farmhouse in Uganda, sitting in his own excrement and digging in the dirt.

“It was a turning point for me,” he recalls. “I left that young man knowing that I had to do something for the mental health of that continent.  He gave me the courage to try to make a difference for some of his mentally ill brothers and sisters.”

Pauline Muchina is dealing with mental illness in her family in Kenya. Her 50-something sister lost her job due to depression and had to come home to live with her mother. She is now on medication and attends counseling.

Muchina also has a nephew suffering from depression. While in a government hospital, he was chained to a bed for one week and his condition got worse. Now the family has found a private rehabilitation center for him. He is getting better but it is costing the family $2,500 for six months. Muchina’s family is middle-class and can pay the treatment (with difficulty), but the vast majority of Kenyans could never afford such expensive treatment.

Mental disorders and substance abuse are the third greatest contributor to the global burden of disability with 23% of the burden – greater than cardiovascular disease or cancer.

Friday, July 3, 2015

Women trying to regain dignity by ending fistula

Djantou
This blog was originally published on Global Health TV on May 27, 2015.


BAMAKO, Mali — Djantou came here from Fangala, her village northwest of Bamako, to repair her fistula, a hole between the birth canal and the bladder or rectum caused by prolonged, obstructed labor without adequate treatment. Djantou’s fistula occurred while she was in labor during her first pregnancy. Her child was stillborn. She wants to have children in the future but she is afraid — both of the operation and of childbirth. Djantou is 15 years old.

Rokia
Rokia is from the village of Tarasso, near the border with Burkina Faso. Twenty years ago, she also developed fistula during her first pregnancy. The baby was stillborn. “The urine would not stop,” she said. Rokia has had two operations but both failed. She is now awaiting her third operation. Although she is 40 years old, she still very much wants to have children.

Fistula is a tragic condition that leaves women leaking urine, feces or both. It can lead to chronic medical problems and cause social exclusion. Women are often abandoned by their husbands and sometimes by their own families because of their incontinence and unpleasant smell. They face depression and social isolation — either self-imposed or by their sometimes unforgiving communities.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

New development goal falls short of protecting those most at risk of HIV

This ISHTAR wellness center in Nairobi works to ensure that gay men have access to non-discriminatory HIV and sexual health services. Credit: Corrie Wingate for the International HIV/AIDS Alliance.
This blog was originally published by The Huffington Post on May 8, 2015.

Dominique, 26, realized he was gay in his early adolescence and now sells sex to other men to survive and to support his relatives in Kisii, in western Kenya. He goes regularly to a drop-in center outside Nairobi run by the Kenya AIDS NGO Consortium (KANCO) where he gets a holistic package of HIV and sexual and reproductive health services.  As a result, he is HIV-negative.

Dominique is a good example of why we need to support people most vulnerable to HIV. Yet the language currently proposed in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) falls short of prioritizing the most marginalized and vulnerable groups (the SDGs are the new development goals replacing the Millennium Development goals which expire later this year).

Goal 3 of the SDGs is to “ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all ages.” Target 3.8 under this goal commits to Universal Health Coverage (UHC). Unfortunately, the UHC target and indicators do not meet the specific needs of the most marginalized, stigmatized and underserved people in the world — like men who have sex with men (who are 19 times more likely to contract HIV than the general population) and transgender women (who are up to 49 times more likely to acquire HIV than all adults of reproductive age).

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

How Mali conquered Ebola

These signs -- which say "Stop the Ebola virus: Wash your hands regularly with soap" are still ubiquitous around Bamako three months after WHO declared Mali Ebola-free.
These signs — which say “Stop the Ebola virus: Wash your hands regularly with soap” are still ubiquitous around Bamako three months after WHO declared Mali Ebola-free.












This blog originally appeared on Global Health TV on April 28, 2015.

BAMAKO, Mali — In the year-old Ebola epidemic, most of the attention has justifiably been focused on Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, where the vast majority of the cases (26,044) and deaths (10,808) have taken place. But what about those countries that have successfully controlled Ebola — Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Spain, the UK and the US — which account for only 35 cases and 15 deaths? 


I am spending two months in one of those countries and wondered how Mali conquered Ebola. Even though the World Health Organization (WHO) had declared Mali Ebola-free in January, I had barely stepped off my airplane at Bamako–Sénou International Airport on March 14 when I encountered Ebola control: I was scanned for a fever and offered hand sanitizer before entering the airport terminal.


Mali went on high alert after confirming its first case of Ebola in late October of last year, when a 2-year-old girl who had traveled from Guinea to Mali died. The country moved quickly in what the government considered an emergency situation. The child, who was symptomatic upon her arrival in Mali, had traveled extensively in the country using public transportation. Aggressive contact tracing was undertaken but none of the contacts showed symptoms.


It looked like the country had dodged a bullet, with only one death. But then an imam from Guinea was admitted to Bamako’s prestigious Pasteur Clinic with a diagnosis of acute kidney failure, and died on Oct. 27. That case set off a chain of transmission that led to seven additional Ebola cases and five deaths, including a doctor and nurse who had treated the imam. He was buried with full traditional rites, including washing of his highly contagious body, which may have exposed mourners to the virus.

Friday, June 19, 2015

Three world-changers: Drones, sanitary pads and schools

This blog originally appeared on Humanosphere on April 20, 2015.

On the Pacific archipelago nation of Vanuatu, a “digital humanitarian” has been using drones to carry out a detailed assessment of the damage caused by Cyclone Pam last month.

In Rwanda, a young African woman is improving the lives of other young women by the simple act of providing them with locally made sanitary pads so they don’t miss work and school.

And in Kenya, a man who grew up in extreme poverty, without formal education, is building schools and fighting poverty and gender inequality in the worst slums of Nairobi. New York Times Columnist Nicholas Kristof says he might be the next Mandela.

All of these young people are trying to change the world in very different ways. Along with at least 50 others, they will be in Saxapahaw, North Carolina April 23-24 for the fourth annual SwitchPoint, a global gathering organized by IntraHealth International (which I need to disclose is one of my clients).

Thursday, June 18, 2015

West Africa finally starting to embrace family planning

A health worker counsels a client in rural Senegal on family planning options. Photo courtesy of IntraHealth International, © 2014 by Jonathan Torgovnik/Reportage by Getty Images
This blog originally appeared on Global Health TV on March 24, 2015.
BAMAKO, Mali  When my wife and I lived here in the late 1980s and early 1990s, our housekeeper, Korotumu, hid her birth control pills on the top shelf in our kitchen, so her husband would not find out she was using contraception. He was unemployed and they had two children. Koro figured that two was enough, at least as long as her husband was not working.
I didn’t realize it then, but Koro was in a progressive minority of Malian women at that time. The 1987 Demographic and Health Survey of Mali revealed only 1.3% of married women were using modern contraception and the fertility rate (the average number of children a woman has in her lifetime) was 7.1. Koro was part of that 1.3%.
Flash forward a quarter of a century and what has happened in Mali? Use of modern contraception has increased to 9.9% and the fertility rate has dropped from 7.1 to 6.1.