Turkmenistan vulnerable to public health catastrophe
Turkmenistan’s health care system is in a ruinous state, in which
"the oath of allegiance [to President Saparmurat Niyazov] has replaced the
Hippocratic Oath," according to a leading Western analyst.
Martin McKee, co-director of the European Centre on Health of
Societies in Transition at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the
laws of the black-market have taken hold of Turkmenistan’s health-care system, forcing
people to pay for treatment that until recently was virtually free. In addition, doctors,
seeking to bolster their meager salaries, often resort to carrying out unnecessary
treatments. While the quality of health care has declined across Central Asia and the
Caucasus following the 1991 Soviet collapse, McKee drew a clear distinction between
developments in Turkmenistan and those elsewhere in the former Soviet Union. Whereas the
health care networks in most former Soviet states "collapsed" amid the chaos
associated with the transition from communism to market-related economic systems, Niyazov
wantonly "destroyed" Turkmenistan’s medical infrastructure, McKee said during
a public presentation January 27 at the Open Society Institute (OSI) in New York.
McKee was a co-author of a 2004 report, titled Human Rights and
Health in Turkmenistan, which detailed the decline of the country’s health care system.
Niyazov has steadily curtailed government support for health-care professionals since the
country gained independence in 1991. Perhaps his most notorious move came in 2004, when he
ordered the dismissal of an estimated 15,000 skilled health-care workers and replaced them
with military conscripts. In early 2005, the mercurial Turkmen leader mentioned that all
hospitals outside the capital Ashgabat would be closed. Given the restrictions on movement
inside the country and the country’s tightly controlled press, outside experts have had
difficulty in determining the extent to which the hospital-closing plan has been carried
out. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
The lack of basic care, McKee stated, "makes diabetes and
hypertension fatal where they needn’t be." Many patients who gain access to a
doctor become victims of what is tantamount to extortion, McKee added. For example, he
said that it is common for a woman bringing in a child for a routine check-up to be forced
to undergo a gynecological exam herself, for which high fees are charged. The tests are
unnecessary, McKee contended, and serve only to augment doctors’ incomes.
The Turkmen government has engaged in a wide-ranging effort to
conceal public-health information from outside scrutiny. Accordingly, the government has
tightly guarded basic public health statistics -- such as those concerning the prevalence
of disease, as well as mortality rates.
Lucy Ash, a reporter for the British Broadcasting Corp. and one of the few Western
journalists to have done on-the-ground reporting in Turkmenistan in recent years, also
spoke at the OSI event, which was co-sponsored by the Turkmenistan Project and the Public
Health Program. [For additional information click here]. Ash related horror stories
concerning health care. Operating surreptitiously in Ashgabat while visiting on a tourist
visa in October, Ash visited one hospital and witnessed patients being treated with
unsanitary instruments and bandages. "We’ve heard of specialists getting referrals,
and telling the patients to come back in two years," Ash added.
Ash also conveyed anecdotal evidence that suggested child mortality
is rapidly rising. She said that in one area of Turkmenistan, over 12 percent of children
die before they reach age five. According to World health Organization data from 2002
shows life expectancy for men in Turkmenistan to be roughly 51 years, and 57.2 years for
women. Ash also interviewed female sex workers and found that many are intravenous drug
users. This fact would suggest that Turkmenistan is vulnerable to an epidemic of HIV/AIDS.
Buttressing the alarming view of Turkmenistan’s health-care
crumbling infrastructure is the fact that so-called health tourism for Turkmen citizens is
booming. Many Turkmen travel to neighboring Uzbekistan to seek medical treatment,
sometimes taking considerable risks to cross the border illegally. Niyazov himself appears
to have shunned the Turkmen health care system when seeking medical treatment. According
to various media reports, Niyazov has brought teams of German doctors to Turkmenistan to
treat him for a variety of illnesses.
Unless steps are undertaken immediately to reverse existing trends,
Turkmenistan stands to experience a public health catastrophe in the not-so-distant
future. "We’re losing a generation of educated people," McKee said. "The
consequences will be tragic."
Posted February 6, 2006 © Eurasianet
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Posted February 6, 2006 Eurasianet |