(X) The Challenge of Global Health
(X) The Challenge of Global Health
PIPE DREAMS
One might think that with all this money on the table, the solutions to many
global health problems would at least now be in sight. But one would be wrong. Most
funds come with strings attached and must be spent according to donors' priorities,
politics, and values. And the largest levels of donations are propelled by mass
emotional responses, such as to the Asian tsunami. Still more money is needed, on a
regular basis and without restrictions on the uses to which it is put. But even if such
resources were to materialize, major obstacles would still stand in the way of their
doing much lasting good.
One problem is that not all the funds appropriated end up being spent
effectively. In an analysis prepared for the second annual meeting of the Clinton
Global Initiative, in September 2006, Dalberg Global Development Advisors
concluded that much current aid spending is trapped in bureaucracies and
multilateral banks. Simply stripping layers of financing bureaucracy and improving
health-delivery systems, the firm argued, could effectively release an additional 15-30
percent of the capital provided for HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria programs.
A 2006 World Bank report, meanwhile, estimated that about half of all funds
donated for health efforts in sub-Saharan Africa never reach the clinics and hospitals
at the end of the line. According to the bank, money leaks out in the form of payments
to ghost employees, padded prices for transport and warehousing, the siphoning off of
drugs to the black market, and the sale of counterfeit—often dangerous—medications.
In Ghana, for example, where such corruption is particularly rampant, an amazing 80
percent of donor funds get diverted from their intended purposes.
Another problem is the lack of coordination of donor activities. Improving
global health will take more funds than any single donor can provide, and oversight
and guidance require the skills of the many, not the talents of a few
compartmentalized in the offices of various groups and agencies. In practice,
moreover, donors often function as competitors, and the only organization with the
political credibility to compel cooperative thinking is the WHO. Yet, as Harvard
University's Christopher Murray points out, the WHO itself is dependent on donors,
who give it much more for disease-specific programs than they do for its core budget.
If the WHO stopped chasing such funds, Murray argues, it could go back to
concentrating on its true mission of providing objective expert advice and strategic
guidance.
This points to yet another problem, which is that aid is almost always
"stovepiped" down narrow channels relating to a particular program or disease. From
an operational perspective, this means that a government may receive considerable
funds to support, for example, an ARV-distribution program for mothers and children
living in the nation's capital. But the same government may have no financial capacity
to support basic maternal and infant health programs, either in the same capital or in
the country as a whole. So HIV-positive mothers are given drugs to hold their
infection at bay and prevent passage of the virus to their babies but still cannot obtain
even the most rudimentary of obstetric and gynecological care or infant
immunizations.
Stovepiping tends to reflect the interests and concerns of the donors, not the
recipients. Diseases and health conditions that enjoy a temporary spotlight in rich
countries garner the most attention and money. This means that advocacy, the whims
of foundations, and the particular concerns of wealthy individuals and governments
drive practically the entire global public health effort. Today the top three killers in
most poor countries are maternal death around childbirth and pediatric respiratory
and intestinal infections leading to death from pulmonary failure or uncontrolled
diarrhea. But few women's rights groups put safe pregnancy near the top of their list
of priorities, and there is no dysentery lobby or celebrity attention given to coughing
babies.
The HIV/AIDS pandemic, meanwhile, continues to be the primary driver of
global concern and action about health. At the 2006 International AIDS Conference,
former U.S. President Bill Clinton suggested that HIV/AIDS programs would end up
helping all other health initiatives. "If you first develop the health infrastructure
throughout the whole country, particularly in Africa, to deal with AIDS," Clinton
argued, "you will increase the infrastructure of dealing with maternal and child
health, malaria, and TB. Then I think you have to look at nutrition, water, and
sanitation. All these things, when you build it up, you'll be helping to promote
economic development and alleviate poverty."
But the experience of bringing ARV treatment to Haiti argues against
Clinton's analysis. The past several years have witnessed the successful provision of
antiretroviral treatment to more than 5,000 needy Haitians, and between 2002 and
2006, the prevalence of HIV in the country plummeted from six percent to three
percent. But during the same period, Haiti actually went backward on every other
health indicator.
Part of the problem is that most of global HIV/AIDS-related funding goes to
stand-alone programs: HIV testing sites, hospices and orphanages for people affected
by AIDS, ARV-dispersal stations, HIV/AIDS education projects, and the like. Because
of discrimination against people infected with HIV, public health systems have been
reluctant to incorporate HIV/AIDS-related programs into general care. The resulting
segregation has reinforced the anti-HIV stigma and helped create cadres of health-
care workers who function largely independently from countries' other health-related
systems. Far from lifting all boats, as Clinton claims, efforts to combat HIV/AIDS
have so far managed to bring more money to the field but have not always had much
beneficial impact on public health outside their own niche.
BRAIN DRAIN
As in Haiti, even as money has poured into Ghana for HIV/AIDS and malaria
programs, the country has moved backward on other health markers. Prenatal care,
maternal health programs, the treatment of guinea worm, measles vaccination efforts
—all have declined as the country has shifted its health-care workers to the better-
funded projects and lost physicians to jobs in the wealthy world. A survey of Ghana's
health-care facilities in 2002 found that 72 percent of all clinics and hospitals were
unable to provide the full range of expected services due to a lack of sufficient
personnel. Forty-three percent were unable to provide full child immunizations; 77
percent were unable to provide 24-hour emergency services and round-the-clock safe
deliveries for women in childbirth. According to Dr. Ken Sagoe, of the Ghana Health
Service, these statistics represent a severe deterioration in Ghana's health capacity.
Sagoe also points out that 604 out of 871 medical officers trained in the country
between 1993 and 2002 now practice overseas.
Zimbabwe, similarly, trained 1,200 doctors during the 1990s, but only 360
remain in the country today. In Kadoma, eight years ago there was one nurse for every
700 residents; today there is one for every 7,500. In 1980, the country was able to fill
90 percent of its nursing positions nationwide; today only 30 percent are filled.
Guinea-Bissau has plenty of donated ARV supplies for its people, but the drugs are
cooking in a hot dockside warehouse because the country lacks doctors to distribute
them. In Zambia, only 50 of the 600 doctors trained over the last 40 years remain
today. Mozambique's health minister says that AIDS is killing the country's health-
care workers faster than they can be recruited and trained: by 2010, the country will
have lost 6,000 lab technicians to the pandemic. A study by the International Labor
Organization estimates that 18-41 percent of the health-care labor force in Africa is
infected with HIV. If they do not receive ARV therapy, these doctors, nurses, and
technicians will die, ushering in a rapid collapse of the very health systems on which
HIV/AIDS programs depend.
Erik Schouten, HIV coordinator for the Malawi Ministry of Health, notes that
of the country's 12 million people, 90,000 have already died from AIDS and 930,000
people are now infected with HIV. Over the last five years, the government has lost 53
percent of its health administrators, 64 percent of its nurses, and 85 percent of its
physicians—mostly to foreign NGOs, largely funded by the U.S. or the British
government or the Gates Foundation, which can easily outbid the ministry for the
services of local health talent. Schouten is now steering a $270 million plan,
supported by PEPFAR, to use financial incentives and training to bring back half of
the lost health-care workers within five years; nearly all of these professionals will be
put to use distributing ARVs. But nothing is being done to replace the health-care
workers who once dealt with malaria, dysentery, vaccination programs, maternal
health, and other issues that lack activist constituencies.
Ibrahim Mohammed, who heads an effort similar to Schouten's in Kenya,
says his nation lost 15 percent of its health work force in the years between 1994 and
2001 but has only found donor support to rebuild personnel for HIV/AIDS efforts; all
other disease programs in the country continue to deteriorate. Kenya's minister of
health, Charity Kaluki Ngilu, says that life expectancy has dropped in her country,
from a 1963 level of 63 years to a mere 47 years today for men and 43 years for
women. In most of the world, male life expectancy is lower than female, but in Kenya
women suffer a terrible risk of dying in childbirth, giving men an edge in survival.
Although AIDS has certainly taken a toll in Kenya, Ngilu primarily blames
plummeting life expectancy on former President Daniel arap Moi, who kept Kenyan
spending on health down to a mere $6.50 per capita annually. Today, Kenya spends
$14.20 per capita on health annually—still an appallingly low number. The country's
public health and medical systems are a shambles. Over the last ten years, the country
has lost 1,670 physicians and 3,900 nurses to emigration, and thousands more nurses
have retired from their profession.
Data from international migration-tracking organizations show that health
professionals from poor countries worldwide are increasingly abandoning their
homes and their professions to take menial jobs in wealthy countries. Morale is low all
over the developing world, where doctors and nurses have the knowledge to save lives
but lack the tools. Where AIDS and drug-resistant TB now burn through populations
like forest fires, health-care workers say that the absence of medicines and other
supplies leaves them feeling more like hospice and mortuary workers than healers.
Compounding the problem are the recruitment activities of Western NGOs
and OECD-supported programs inside poor countries, which poach local talent. To
help comply with financial and reporting requirements imposed by the IMF, the
World Bank, and other donors, these programs are also soaking up the pool of local
economists, accountants, and translators. The U.S. Congress imposed a number of
limitations on PEPFAR spending, including a ceiling for health-care-worker training
of $1 million per country. PEPFAR is prohibited from directly topping off salaries to
match government pay levels. But PEPFAR-funded programs, UN agencies, other
rich-country government agencies, and NGOs routinely augment the base salaries of
local staff with benefits such as housing and education subsidies, frequently bringing
their employees' effective wages to a hundred times what they could earn at
government-run clinics.
USAID's Kent Hill says that this trend is "a horrendous dilemma" that causes
"immense pain" in poor countries. But without tough guidelines or some sort of moral
consensus among UN agencies, NGOs, and donors, it is hard to see what will slow the
drain of talent from already-stressed ministries of health.
GOING DUTCH?
The most commonly suggested solution to the problematic pay differential
between the wages offered by local governments and those offered by international
programs is to bolster the salaries of local officials. But this move would be
enormously expensive (perhaps totaling $2 billion over the next five years, according
to one estimate) and might not work, because of the problems that stem from
injecting too much outside capital into local economies.
In a recent macroeconomic analysis, the UN Development Program (UNDP)
noted that international spending on HIV/AIDS programs in poor countries doubled
between 2002 and 2004. Soon it will have doubled again. For poor countries, this
escalation means that by the end of 2007, HIV/AIDS spending could command up to
ten percent of their GDPs. And that is before donors even begin to address the health-
care-worker crisis or provide subsidies to offset NGO salaries.
There are three concerns regarding such dramatic escalations in external
funding: the so-called Dutch disease, inflation and other economic problems, and the
deterioration of national control. The UNDP is at great pains to dismiss the potential
of Dutch disease, a term used by economists to describe situations in which the
spending of externally derived funds so exceeds domestic private-sector and
manufacturing investment that a country's economy is destabilized. UNDP officials
argue that these risks can be controlled through careful monetary management, but
not all observers are as sanguine.
Some analysts, meanwhile, insist that massive infusions of foreign cash into
the public sector undermine local manufacturing and economic development. Thus,
Arvind Subramanian, of the IMF, points out that all the best talent in Mozambique
and Uganda is tied up in what he calls "the aid industry," and, he says, foreign-aid
efforts suck all the air out of local innovation and entrepreneurship. {See Footnote 1}
A more immediate concern is that raising salaries for health-care workers and
managers directly involved in HIV/AIDS and other health programs will lead to salary
boosts in other public sectors and spawn inflation in the countries in question. This
would widen the gap between the rich and the poor, pushing the costs of staples
beyond the reach of many citizens. If not carefully managed, the influx of cash could
exacerbate such conditions as malnutrition and homelessness while undermining any
possibility that local industries could eventually grow and support themselves through
competitive exports.
Regardless of whether these problems proliferate, it is curious that even the
most ardent capitalist nations funnel few if any resources toward local industries and
profit centers related to health. Ministries of health in poor countries face increasing
competition from NGOs and relief agencies but almost none from their local private
sectors. This should be troubling, because if no locals can profit legitimately from any
aspect of health care, it is unlikely that poor countries will ever be able to escape
dependency on foreign aid.
Finally, major influxes of foreign funding can raise important questions
about national control and the skewing of health-care policies toward foreign rather
than domestic priorities. Many governments and activists complain that the U.S.
government, in particular, already exerts too much control over the design and
emphasis of local HIV/AIDS programs. This objection is especially strong regarding
HIV-prevention programs, with claims that the Bush administration has pushed
abstinence, fidelity, and faith-based programs at the expense of locally generated
condom- and needle-distribution efforts.
Donor states need to find ways not only to solve the human resource crisis
inside poor countries but also to decrease their own dependency on foreign health-
care workers. In 2002, stinging from the harsh criticism leveled against the
recruitment practices of the NHS (the United Kingdom's National Health Service) in
Africa, the United Kingdom passed the Commonwealth Code of Practice for the
International Recruitment of Health Workers, designed to encourage increased
domestic health-care training and eliminate recruitment in poor countries without the
full approval of host governments. British officials argue that although the code has
limited efficacy, it makes a contribution by setting out guidelines for best practices
regarding the recruitment and migration of health-care personnel. No such code
exists in the United States, in the EU more generally, or in Asia—but it should.
Unfortunately, the U.S. Congress has gone in the opposite direction, acceding
to pressure from the private health-care sector and inserting immigration-control
exemptions for health-care personnel into recent legislation. In 2005, Congress set
aside 50,000 special immigration visas for nurses willing to work in U.S. hospitals.
The set-aside was used up by early 2006, and Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kans.) then
sponsored legislation eliminating all caps on the immigration of nurses. The
legislation offers no compensation to the countries from which the nurses would come
—countries such as China, India, Kenya, Nigeria, the Philippines, and the English-
speaking Caribbean nations.
American nursing schools reject more than 150,000 applicants every year,
due less to the applicants' poor qualifications than to a lack of openings. If it fixed this
problem, the United States could be entirely self-sufficient in nursing. So why is it
failing to do so? Because too few people want to be nursing professors, given that the
salaries for full-time nurses are higher. Yet every year Congress has refused to pass
bills that would provide federal support to underfunded public nursing schools, which
would augment professors' salaries and allow the colleges to accept more applicants.
Similar (although more complex) forms of federal support could lead to dramatic
increases in the domestic training of doctors and other health-care personnel.
Jim Leach, an outgoing Republican member of the House of Representatives
from Iowa, has proposed something called the Global Health Services Corps, which
would allocate roughly $250 million per year to support 500 American physicians
working abroad in poor countries. And outgoing Senator Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), who
volunteers his services as a cardiologist to poor countries for two weeks each year, has
proposed federal support for sending American doctors to poor countries for short
trips, during which they might serve as surgeons or medical consultants.
Although it is laudable that some American medical professionals are willing
to volunteer their time abroad, the personnel crisis in the developing world will not be
dealt with until the United States and other wealthy nations clean up their own
houses. OECD nations should offer enough support for their domestic health-care
training programs to ensure that their countries' future medical needs can be filled
with indigenous personnel. And all donor programs in the developing world, whether
from OECD governments or NGOs and foundations, should have built into their
funding parameters ample money to cover the training and salaries of enough new
local health-care personnel to carry out the projects in question, so that they do not
drain talent from other local needs in both the public and the private sectors.
DOC-IN-A-BOX
As a thought experiment, the Council on Foreign Relations' Global Health
Program has conceived of Doc-in-a-Box, a prototype of a delivery system for the
prevention and treatment of infectious diseases. The idea is to convert abandoned
shipping containers into compact transportable clinics suitable for use throughout the
developing world.
Shipping containers are durable structures manufactured according to
universal standardized specifications and are able to be transported practically
anywhere via ships, railroads, and trucks. Because of trade imbalances, moreover,
used containers are piling up at ports worldwide, abandoned for scrap. Engineers at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute converted a sample used container into a prototype
Doc-in-a-Box for about $5,000, including shipping. It was wired for electricity and
fully lit and featured a water filtration system, a corrugated tin roofing system
equipped with louvers for protection during inclement weather, a newly tiled floor,
and conventional doors and windows. Given economies of scale and with the
conversions performed in the developing world rather than New York, it is estimated
that large numbers of Doc-in-a-Boxes could be produced and delivered for about
$1,500 each.
Staffed by paramedics, the boxes would be designed for the prevention,
diagnosis, and treatment of all major infectious diseases. Each would be linked to a
central hub via wireless communications, with its performance and inventory needs
monitored by nurses and doctors.
Governments, donors, and NGOs could choose from a variety of models with
customizable options, ordering paramedic training modules, supplies, and systems-
management equipment as needed. Doc-in-a-Boxes could operate under a franchise
model, with the paramedics involved realizing profits based on the volume and
quality of their operations. Franchises could be located in areas now grossly
underserved by health clinics and hospitals, thus extending health-care opportunities
without generating competitive pressure for existing facilities.
On a global scale, with tens of thousands of Doc-in-a-Boxes in place, the
system would be able to track and respond to changing needs on the ground. It would
generate incentives to pull rapid diagnostics, easy-to-take medicines, new types of
vaccines, and novel prevention tools out of the pipelines of biotechnology and
pharmaceutical companies. Supplies could be purchased in bulk, guaranteeing low
per-unit costs. And the sorts of Fortune 500 companies that now belong to the Global
Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, TB, and Malaria would be able to provide services
and advice.
Over time, Doc-in-a-Boxes could emerge as sustainable local businesses,
providing desperately needed health-care services to poor communities while
generating investment and employment, like branches of Starbucks or McDonald's.
{Footnote 1} In the original version of "The Challenge of Global Health," the
view that "foreign aid efforts suck all the air out of local innovation and
entrepreneurship" was incorrectly attributed to Steven Radelet.
Key words
Global Health Governance
Scourge Ravage Sick
Disease Poised Tackle
Spread Self-protection Mind-boggling
Nongovernmental Organization Vie
Health care Neglect Aid
Drug Well-being Physician
Shortage Wealth Worldwide
Scale up Safeguard Outcome
Prevention Treatment Surge
Pandemic Inequity Exhilarating
Pony up Developing country Proper
Widespread Budget Mount
Assistance Spearhead Philanthropy
Support Blindness Hard-hitting
Bolster Threat Research
Stave off Epidemiology Bolster
Threat Research Stave off
Epidemiology Surveillance Boon
In sight Propel Bureaucracy
Counterfeit Rampant Divert
Oversight Immunization Childbirth
Lobby Sanitation Plummet
Subsidize Concoct Chronic
Saddle Fret Slum
Precarious Life expectancy Infected
Deteriorate Appalling Shambles
Mortuary Heal Stem
Immediate Malnutrition Proliferate
Exert Expense Efficacy
Survival Workforce Strengthen
Overall Round the clock Sterile
Thrive perish Long-lived Mortality rate
Encompassing Deleterious Infectious disease
Carnage Outbreak Exacerbate
Resurgence Latent Blood bank
Strive