/ 15 July 2010

Amnesty paints desperate picture of N Korea healthcare

Surgery without anaesthetics, unsterilised needles and epidemics worsened by malnutrition illustrate the desperate state of North Korea’s healthcare system, Amnesty International said on Thursday.

Food shortages have persisted since the 1990s famine and some North Koreans survive partly on grass, tree roots and bark, the international rights group said in a report.

The communist state says healthcare is free for all, but Amnesty said many witnesses told it they have had to pay for all services since the 1990s.

Doctors were usually paid in cigarettes, alcohol or food for consultations and took cash for tests or surgery.

“If you don’t have money, you die,” the report quoted a 20-year-old woman refugee as saying.

The report, citing World Health Organisation (WHO) figures, said the North spent less on healthcare than any other country — less than $1 per person per year in total.

It urged the North to take effective steps to tackle food shortages, including accepting international assistance and ensuring the transparent delivery of food aid.

Amnesty called on the international community to support the UN’s “grossly underfunded” World Food Programme and other aid groups, and to ensure provision of aid is based on need and not political considerations.

“It is crucial that aid to North Korea is not used as a political football by donor countries,” said Catherine Baber, Amnesty’s deputy Asia-Pacific director, in a statement.

The report paints a Dickensian portrait of barely functioning hospitals bereft of anaesthetics and medicines, with unsterilised needles and bloodstained sheets.

Amnesty said its report was based on interviews with more than 40 North Koreans now living overseas and with health professionals working in the secretive country.

It quoted a 56-year-old woman from the north-eastern city of Musan, who underwent surgery to remove her appendix in 2001 without anaesthesia.

“I was screaming so much from the pain, I thought I was going to die. They had tied my hands and legs to prevent me from moving,” she said.

Baber said the North failed to provide for the most basic health and survival needs of its people, especially those too poor to pay for medical care.

Constant food shortages
Amnesty reported that many people bypass doctors altogether and go to the markets to buy medicine, which they administer through guesswork or the advice of stallholders.

“The government’s failure to provide basic education about using medication is especially worrying as North Korea fights a tuberculosis epidemic,” Baber said.

Quoting WHO figures, the report estimated that 5% of the 24-million people are infected with tuberculosis and a growing number have developed resistance to first-line drugs.

Amnesty cited constant food shortages, worsened by policies such as a botched currency revaluation last November. A 2008 UN survey showed nine million people lacked enough food.

But Amnesty said the government had been reluctant to seek international assistance. In March 2009, as relations became more strained, the North refused to accept any further US food aid.

Amnesty researcher Norma Kang Muico told a press conference to launch the report that the North may be prepared to accept international cooperation on healthcare.

She said Pyongyang sought help from the WHO and the Red Cross to fight a malaria epidemic a couple of years ago, and noted that the World Food Programme had made progress in monitoring food deliveries.

“This is a forward-backward movement but I would say there still is a slow progression,” Muico said. — AFP