Drugs Banned, World’s Poor Suffer in Pain
By DONALD G. McNEIL
Jr.
WATERLOO, Sierra Leone — Although the rainy season was coming on fast,
Zainabu Sesay was in no shape to help her husband. Ditches had to be dug to
protect their cassava and peanuts, and their mud hut’s palm roof was sliding
off.
But Mrs. Sesay was sick. She had breast cancer in a form that Western
doctors rarely see anymore — the tumor had burst through her skin, looking like
a putrid head of cauliflower weeping small amounts of blood at its edges.
“It
bone! It booonnnne lie de fi-yuh!” she said of the pain — it burns like fire —
in Krio, the blended language spoken in this country where British colonizers
resettled freed slaves.
No one had directly told her yet, but there was no
hope — the cancer was also in her lymph glands and ribs.
Like millions of
others in the world’s poorest countries, she is destined to die in pain. She
cannot get the drug she needs — one that is cheap, effective, perfectly legal
for medical uses under treaties signed by virtually every country, made in large
quantities, and has been around since Hippocrates praised its source, the opium
poppy. She cannot get morphine.
That is not merely because of her poverty, or
that of Sierra Leone. Narcotics incite fear: doctors fear addicting patients and
law enforcement officials fear drug crime. Often, the government elite who can
afford medicine for themselves are indifferent to the sufferings of the
poor.
The World Health Organization estimates that 4.8 million people a year
with moderate to severe cancer pain receive no appropriate treatment. Nor do
another 1.4 million with late-stage AIDS. For other causes of lingering pain —
burns, car accidents, gunshots, diabetic nerve damage, sickle-cell disease and
so on — it issues no estimates but believes that millions go
untreated.
Figures gathered by the International Narcotics Control Board, a
United Nations agency, make it clear: citizens of rich nations suffer less. Six
countries — the United States, Canada, France, Germany, Britain and Australia —
consume 79 percent of the world’s morphine, according to a 2005 estimate. The
poor and middle-income countries where 80 percent of the world’s people live
consumed only about 6 percent.
Some countries imported virtually none. “Even
if the president gets cancer pain, he will get no analgesia,” said Willem
Scholten, a World Health Organization official who studies the issue.
In
2004, consumption of morphine per person in the United States was about 17,000
times that in Sierra Leone.
At pain conferences, doctors from Africa describe
patients whose pain is so bad that they have chosen other remedies: hanging
themselves or throwing themselves in front of trucks.
Westerners tend to
assume that most people in tropical countries die of malaria, AIDS, worm
diseases and unpronounceable ills. But as vaccines, antibiotics and AIDS drugs
become more common, more and more are surviving past measles, infections, birth
complications and other sources of a quick death. They grow old enough to die
slowly of cancer.
About half the six million cancer deaths in the world last
year were in poor countries, and most diagnoses were made late, when death was
inevitable. But first, there was agony. About 80 percent of all cancer victims
suffer severe pain, the W.H.O. estimates, as do half of those dying of
AIDS.
Morphine’s raw ingredient — opium — is not in short supply. Poppies are
grown for heroin, of course, in Afghanistan and elsewhere. But vast fields for
morphine and codeine are also grown in India, Turkey, France, Australia and
other countries.
Nor is it expensive, even by the standards of developing
nations. One hospice in Uganda, for example, mixes its own liquid morphine so
cheaply that a three-week supply costs less than a loaf of
bread.
Nonetheless, it is still routinely denied in many poor
countries.
“It’s the intense fear of addiction, which is often
misunderstood,” said David E. Joranson, director of the Pain Policy Study Group
at the University of Wisconsin’s medical school, who has worked to change drugs
laws around the world. “Pain relief hasn’t been given as much attention as the
war on drugs has.”
Doctors in developing countries, he explained, often have
beliefs about narcotics that prevailed in Western medical schools decades ago —
that they are inevitably addictive, carry high risks of killing patients and
must be used sparingly, even if patients suffer.
Pain experts argue that it
is cruel to deny them to the dying and that patients who recover from pain can
usually be weaned off. Withdrawal symptoms are inevitable, they say — as they
are if a diabetic stops insulin. But the benefits outweigh the risks.
Too
Poor for Medicine
In Mrs. Sesay’s case, Alfred Lewis, a nurse from Shepherd’s
Hospice, is doing what he can to ease her last days.
When he first saw her,
her tumor was wrapped with clay and leaves prescribed by a local healer. The
smell of her rotting skin made her feel ashamed.
She had seen a doctor at one
of many low-cost “Indian clinics” who pulled at the breast with forceps so hard
that she screamed, misdiagnosed her tumor as an infected boil, and gave her an
injection in her buttocks that abscessed, adding to her misery.
Nothing can
be done about the tumor, Mr. Lewis explained quietly. “All the bleeders are
open,” he said. “Her risk now is hemorrhage. Only a knife-crazy surgeon would
attend to her.”
Earlier diagnosis would probably not have changed her fate.
Sierra Leone has no CAT scanners, and only one private hospital offers
chemotherapy drug treatment. The Sesays are sharecroppers; they have no
money.
So Mr. Lewis was making a daily 10-mile trip from Freetown, the
capital, to change her dressing, sprinkle on antibiotics, and talk to her. He
asked a neighbor to plait her hair for her, so she would look pretty. Mrs. Sesay
said she could not be bothered.
“It’s necessary for to cope,” he said. “For
to strive for be happy.”
“I ‘fraid for my life,” she said.
“Are you ‘fraid
for die?”
“No, I not ‘fraid. I ready.”
“So what is your relationship to
God? You good with God?”
“I pray me one.”
He asked her, half-jokingly, if
she still had sex with her husband.
No, she said, since the illness, he
stayed in his room and she stayed in hers. She, too, was joking. In their hut,
there is only the one room.
Life has become hard, she added, and her husband
is getting too old for farm labor. She, too, is getting old, she said — she is
somewhere in her 40s.
“We are really being punish.”
For her pain, Mr.
Lewis gave her generic Tylenol and tramadol, a relative of codeine that is only
10 percent as potent as morphine. It was all he could offer. “I would consider
putting her on morphine now, if we had morphine,” Mr. Lewis said.
In New
York, she would have already started on it, or an equivalent like oxycodone or
fentanyl.
Even if his hospice could get it, Mr. Lewis could not give it to
her.
Under Sierra Leone law, morphine may be handled only by a pharmacist or
doctor, explained Gabriel Madiye, the hospice’s founder. But in all Sierra Leone
there are only about 100 doctors — one for every 54,000 people, compared with
one for every 350 in the United States.
In only a few places — in Uganda, for
example — does the law allow trained nurses to prescribe morphine.
And
pharmacists will not stock it.
“It’s opiod phobia,” Mr. Madiye said. “We are
coming out of a war where a lot of human rights violations were caused by drug
abuse.”
During the war, the rebel assault on the capital was called Operation
No Living Thing. Child soldiers were hardened with mysterious drugs with names
like gunpowder and brown-brown, along with glue and alcohol.
Esther Walker, a
British nurse who sometimes works with Mr. Lewis, said she once gave a lecture
on palliative care at the national medical school.
There were 28 students,
and she asked them, “Who has seen someone die peacefully in Sierra
Leone?”
“Not one had,” she said.
The Burden on the Young
In the poorest
countries like this one, even babies suffer.
Momoh Sesay, 2, (no relation to
Zainabu) is a pretty lucky little guy — for someone who tumbled into a cooking
pot of boiling water.
He lost much of the skin on his thighs, and his belly
is speckled with burns as if he had been sloshed with pink paint.
But he was
fortunate enough to live close to Ola During Children’s Hospital, the leading
pediatric institution.
No doctor was in. There was not even any electricity.
At night, nurses thread IV lines into babies’ tiny limbs by candlelight. “And
our eyes are not magnets,” one of them, Josephine Maajenneh Sillah,
complained.
But they knew Momoh would die of shock and pumped in intravenous
fluids and antibiotics.
If he had been born in New York, Momoh would have had
skin grafts. Here, that is unthinkable.
Momoh was given saline washes, and
his dead skin was scrubbed off with debridement, a painful procedure. In New
York, he would have had morphine.
So probably would Abdulaziz Sankoh, 7, in
another bed, who has sickle cell disease. He moans at night when twisted blood
cells clump together and jam the arteries in his spindly legs, slowly killing
his bone marrow.
As would Musa Shariff, an 8-month old boy whose scalp is so
swollen by meningitis that his eyelids cannot close. Dr. Muctar Jalloh, the
hospital director, said he would not prescribe morphine to babies or toddlers if
he had it. Only in the case of third-degree burns, like Momoh’s, did he say: “I
would consider it — maybe.”
That flies in the face of Western medicine, which
allows careful use even in premature infants.
The strongest painkiller that
Momoh, Abdulaziz and Musa can take, if their parents can afford $1.65 per vial,
is tramadol. It is impossible to know what morphine would cost if it were here,
but it is sold in India at 1.7 cents a pill by the same company that makes
tramadol.
The nurses know the prices because they sell the drugs that are
available. They have not been paid for three years, they say, so they support
themselves in part by filling the prescriptions that the doctors write. Kind as
they are — they do extend credit, and are sometimes moved to charity by the
children — it is a business.
That is the other reason Dr. Jalloh said he
would not order morphine. “I wouldn’t want to leave my staff in charge of
morphine,” he said. “The potential for abuse is so high.”
Worries About
Abuse
If morphine were to be imported to Sierra Leone, it would be overseen
by two agencies: the National Pharmacy Board and the National Drugs Control
Agency.
Kande Bangura, the rangy, sharp-eyed former police commander who runs
the drug control agency, said the country had a serious drug-abuse problem,
especially among former child soldiers.
It also is a smuggling route. He
spread out pictures of an autopsy on a British citizen with Nigerian roots who
had dropped dead in line at Freetown’s airport. His intestines were found to be
packed with condoms full of cocaine, one of which had burst.
Mr. Bangura said
he had no objections to morphine, however, “as long as it’s for medical use and
is strictly controlled by the country’s chief pharmacist.”
Wiltshire C. N.
Johnson, the chief of the enforcement arm of the National Pharmacy Board,
explained why painkillers were not imported.
Scarce funds must go to the top
five causes of death, he said: diarrhea, pneumonia, tuberculosis, malaria and
sexually transmitted diseases. “I’m not saying that palliative care doesn’t top
the list, too,” he said. “But it’s officially a very small percentage of the
requirement.”
He also had fears like those of Dr. Jalloh. “There’s no way
we’re going to put morphine in the hands of a pharmacy technician,” he said. “In
the wrong hands, drugs, like guns, are a greater evil than a cure.”
Mr.
Madiye, who predicted exactly those answers before the interviews started,
vented his frustration later.
He founded Shepherd’s Hospice in 1995, saw it
destroyed in the civil war and rebuilt it. But he cannot get the one drug that
would let him give people like Zainabu Sesay the dignified deaths that in the
West would be their birthright.
“How can they say there is no demand when
they don’t allow it?” he asked. “How can they be so sure that it will get out of
control when they haven’t even tried it?”
Sad isn't it !
Connie
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information of interest or questions : ) ETC !
Attorney Constance A. Morrison DNP JD MBA ARNP, BC
CNS - PMHNP
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