Globalisation, Health Nursing
and The Gospel
Written
by Steve Fouch
Many of you would have noticed in 2005 the emphasis on global poverty and the
attempts to get major world leaders to do something about it. Live 8, Make
Poverty History, dramas by Richard Curtis, songs by Sting and swearing by
Bob Geldoff. Somehow or another, at least over the summer months, global
poverty became big news – it even featured surprisingly high in the General Election in May!
Well, here we are in 2006, and it would be easy to ask, what has happened?
The answer – well not that much actually. But also, surprisingly more than
in previous years. There is no end to global poverty in sight, yet more
people are being treated for AIDS, TB and malaria than ever before.
Millions are still dying in famines and in childbirth, but debt relief
and aid to the poorest nations is increasing as never before. Small
steps, but as the Chinese saying goes, “the journey of a thousand
leagues starts with a single step”.
William Wilberforce fought for over thirty years to end slavery – but
in the end he succeeded and changed the world as a result. We are in
the midst of an even bigger struggle to change the world, and like
Wilberforce, it is faith in Jesus and a strong grasp of scripture
that is motivating many to lead this fight, but we have to be in it
for the long haul – it won’t change overnight.
Nevertheless, one could well ask, “What has this got to do with me?”
After all, we have problems enough to deal with here in the UK, and
what can we do to make life any better for people on the other side
of the world when we cannot do much about those in need on our own doorsteps?
Well, consider a few facts, coolly and objectively. The average woman in
sub-Saharan Africa has a one in six chance of dying in childbirth. If you
are a midwife, think about how many babies you have delivered; how may are
still born or die shortly afterwards? How may of their mothers die? One
in every six? I doubt it if you are working in the UK. While we are at it,
in East Africa, on average 40% of the women turning up at antenatal clinics
are HIV+. How may do you see here in Britain?
What are your chances of making it to adulthood? In the UK, pretty good –
only 6 in a thousand children do not make it to five. In developing countries,
the odds shrink rapidly; in Turkey it’s 35 in 1,000; while in Liberia 235 in
1,000 won’t live beyond their fifth birthday.
Add to this AIDS, which claims over three million lives a year, mostly in
Africa and Asia, where between six and nine million people with an AIDS
diagnosis have no access to treatment. Similar statistic can be quoted
for TB and malaria.
Need I go on? We are privileged here in the West, we all know that.
We have access to healthcare free at the point of delivery, which most of
the world’s poor do not have. We have more food than we need to survive,
so much so that overeating is one of our biggest health problems.
But this does not tell us why as nurses and midwives practicing in
Britain this is an issue to concern us.
Well, here are three reasons. Firstly, we are in globalised world. The
panics caused by avian influenza and SARS in recent years illustrate how
a health problem in one part of the world affects every part of the world.
Poverty, war, famine, and disease -the four horsemen ride far and wide and
pay no respect to national boundaries, even to our own doorsteps. TB is on
the rise in schools and communities across Britain, as any public health
nurse will tell you. Refugees are living amongst us, with their own needs-
many of us see them regularly in our work. What horrors have they have
lived through? What physical and mental health needs do we have to deal
with regularly as a result of disasters in far-flung nations?
These are matters to concern us all.
Secondly, our actions and choices affect other nations. The issues of
international trade are complex, but in short, the poor cannot sell us
their goods at a reasonable price so they can make a living, while we
unload heavily subsidised goods on them, driving their own business to
close down because they cannot compete. What we buy and how we buy it,
affects others. Our lifestyles have far reaching consequences, more
than we can discuss in one article!
Finally, and most importantly, we should care because God tells us to!
Scripture urges us to respond to the needs of the poor. Jesus’ much
misquoted saying “the poor will you will always have with you” is actually
taken from Deuteronomy 15: 11 – the second half of which says “Therefore I
command you saying ‘You shall freely open your hand to your brother, to
your needy and poor in your land’”. The New Testament also exhorts us
to care for the needs of our brothers in poverty (e.g. 1 John 3: 16 –18,
James 2: 14 – 17). It could be argued that this does not relate to those
in other nations, but to our near neighbours, but again we are exhorted
to care for the whole Body of Christ (1 Corinthians 12: 20-26), and it
is clear that a huge proportion of those suffering in Africa in particular
are Christians. Furthermore, Jesus made a strong point that our neighbour
was anyone in need, of any nation, tribe, creed or tongue (Luke 10: 25 – 37).
Yet at the same time, giving money, sending Christian health professionals
and other forms of aid are not enough. Such aid helps in the short-term,
but in the long-term it fosters dependency and feeds corruption.
The Levitical Law encouraged generosity to the poor, but the aid given
was to help that person be able to make his own living again. The laws
required that debts be cancelled and land restored to its original owners
on regular cycles, ensuring that the means of living were not concentrated
in one set of hands for too long, and that people could feed and clothe
themselves rather than depend indefinitely on the goodwill of their
neighbours (Leviticus 25 & Deuteronomy 15).
There is then above all a call for us to pursue justice as believers.
Poverty may be always with us, and some degree of inequality is inevitable,
and not necessarily unjust, but the degree of extreme poverty and inequality
in health that we see today is not acceptable, especially as so many of
the causes are due to injustice. That is why we are exhorted to speak
up for the poor, and encourage those in power to act justly on their behalf.
As nurses and midwives, what can we do? We have skills that can be used in
many places [see the elective report from Elisabeth Sayers, and the article
from John & Mair Pugh in this edition of CNM News for some examples].
We can make a positive contribution to the health of the poor. We can
get informed and speak out. There are many great sources of information
on health and poverty issues around the world – Tear Times is one good example.
The Micah Challenge campaign (see www.micahchallenge.org) is another example –
it encourages Christian to get informed and speak out on issue of global
poverty from a Christian perspective.
At this year’s national conference [see Notice Board for details] I will be
looking at these issues, and how we can respond in a Christ like manner as
health professionals. In future editions of CNM News we will attempt to
look at some of these issues in more depth and have some examples of ways
you can get involved.
As we start a New Year, full of resolutions and plans let us stop for a moment
and consider what God might be saying to us about what we can do to affect
positively the lives and well being of millions around the globe.