By Arthur Kobina Kennedy
Protecting the health of the public is one of the cardinal responsibilities of every government. There is hardly anyone who will disagree with this statement.
The question on my mind today as we celebrate our republic is whether indeed our government is doing an adequate job of protecting our health.
Are we adequately protected on our roads?
Are we well protected from the dangers of filth?
Are our anti-pollution laws being enforced?
Are the medicines imported into our country safe?
These are only a few of the questions on my mind and I am sure that since you started reading this, you have thought of a few. In other columns, I have addressed road accidents and filth so I do not intend to address them today.
Last week, I was listening to a very popular radio station when I heard a lady advertising some medication. She said that she and her husband had been cured of cancer and H.IV. by a traditional health professional they had visited after taking the medicine!!! Cured of H.I.V. and cancer? The lady went on to in effect claim that the practitioner she was talking about could cure virtually every disease.
Shrewdly, she liberally sprinkled in the name of God.
A day later, I was surfing T.V. channels when I saw on one of our channels, a white lady with a stethoscope. In halting English, she claimed that her facility had a machine that could, in effect diagnose virtually any disease under the sun. I have been a physician for a while but I have never heard of such a machine. I wondered whether this advert had set out to exploit the credibility most Ghanaians ascribe to whites in the peddling of obviously false claims.
I have not travelled by private bus between Accra and Kumasi for some time but I am told that vendors still ply their wares in our buses and at lorry stations selling instant cures for everything from impotence to cancer.
A few days ago, while trying to locate a friend’s office, I saw a large group of mostly young men and women gathered in front of a building. When I inquired, I was told that they were there to collect some Chinese medicines that they would retail to the public. A few weeks ago, I met a young man who had paid hundreds of Ghana cedis to one of the popular so-called “healing centers” and after six months had ended up in hospital with more problems than he started with. For a complaint of impotence and back-pain, he was charged 10 million old Ghana cedis with a deposit of 4 million old cedis. In the end, he ended up going to Korle-Bu where it was discovered that as a side-effect of the herbal medicine, he had developed kidney failure.
Some caveats here. This is not an attempt to give the impression that all the medicines being sold through radio and other such means are bad or that traditional medicines are bad. I am aware that there are good herbal cures and that many medications that are now mainstays of western medicine were once herbs in remote places on earth. Indeed, I have seen some good adverts on diaper rush and contraceptives that are very well done and very commendable.
On the other hand, one hears occasionally of things done in the name of western medicine that are unacceptable. The focus of this is to draw attention to how vulnerable the public is.
Here are some facts that should keep you awake at night:
- According to authorities, of the nearly five hundred private clinics and hospitals in Accra, only about a hundred have the necessary clearances to operate. All the rest are operating in defiance of our laws and the authorities have no idea whether what they are doing meets the necessary standards or not. The board established to police private health facilities simply lacks the manpower and resources to supervise them.
- According to informed sources, nearly a quarter of the drugs we import into the country may be fake or substandard and the Standards Board and the Food and Drugs Board lack the staff and resources to do an adequate job of policing the importation of drugs. And by the way, next time you buy medicine from a pharmacy, check the expiration date because you may be buying expired medicine.
- Do you buy and drink sachet water in Ghana? Well I do sometimes too but each time you do so, pray because a lot of the establishments manufacturing “sachet water” are not licensed to operate.
- Do you like eating at chop bars? I do too but many of the places we eat do not operate according to any standards and are not supervised by anybody.
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