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17 October 2006

"Lessons from Pain: Treating Sierra Leone's Endless Health Emergency"

MSF says the country's shocking medical condition can be improved despite the appalling poverty. More than five years after the end of one of Africa's most devastating civil wars, Sierra Leone's health status is still disastrous and yet more lives could be saved by some relatively simple changes.

Read the report Lessons from Pain: Treating Sierra Leone's Endless Health Emergency
Read the summary of the 2005 survey Access to healthcare in post-war Sierra Leone

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a medical emergency organization which has been working in the country since 1994, shows in a new report that people are still dying from very preventable causes. People are suffering because the health system cannot cope. Through patients’ personal stories, the report focuses on three particular areas where MSF says change can be made: malaria treatment, the provision of mother and child health care, and the charges levied on patients.

Malaria is widespread and lethal across the country. Continuing delays in using the effective medication against malaria, Artemisine-based Combination Therapy (ACT), are causing the unnecessary death of many people, especially children. An MSF survey done in 2005 shows that up to 63% of deaths in children under five were caused by the disease. Although the Ministry of Health agreed two years ago to implement ACT treatment, the drugs are still not available to the majority of patients.

In the area of maternal and child health, MSF says that providing "waiting houses" attached to district hospitals, can help women with complications at delivery to receive timely medical assistance. Pregnant women can spend in such structures the last few weeks before delivering, and because they are close to the hospitals, they have immediate access to assistance. Those houses are also cheap and easy to run.

Finally, MSF shows that charging patients substantially reduces the number of sick people who come to health facilities, even when they are seriously ill. In the survey that MSF carried out last year, we found out that only one out of three household declared using the nearest health center during their last episode of illness. In theory sick people who are unable to pay should be protected by an exemption system, yet the system is not working and the poorest are the first victims.

"We don't pretend to solve the structural problems of under-development in Sierra Leone," said Jonathan Heffer, MSF's Head of Mission in Sierra Leone. "But these changes would make a dramatic difference to reducing suffering and death. And they can be done, as we have shown in our projects”.

For more information, you can download the report Lessons from Pain: Treating Sierra Leone's Endless Health Emergencyand the summary of the 2005 survey Access to healthcare in post-war Sierra Leone

For more information contact James Nichols, 02 8570 2600 or 0407 525 700

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