Health And Education Issues In The Middle East

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Health and Education Issues in the Middle East

Introduction

At the height of the Arab-Islamic civilisation between the 8th and 12th century, scholars laid the foundation for modern medicine based on observation and reasoning.1 Avicenna's Al Qanun of Medicine was the standard medical text in Europe for several centuries. In the bimaristans (hospitals), still standing in the heart of Aleppo (figure), the mentally ill were treated with water, music, light, and the scent of flowers—testament to enlightened attitudes. Today, the geopolitical remnants of that empire, a legacy of past conflicts and externally imposed boundaries, includes some of the poorest and richest countries in the world, whose basic health indicators generally parallel their economic status.

Health and Education Issues in the Middle East

History in Middle East

Many of these countries, rich and poor, spend far more on defence than on health and research and development combined and are lagging behind on major indices of development. Authoritarian regimes, economic incentives, and conflicts have resulted in the migration of health professionals: an estimated 15 000 Arab doctors left their countries between 1998 and 2000. Wide health disparities within some countries exceed those between rich and poor nations. This issue of the BMJ draws attention to these health divides, the high burden of disease associated with preventable conditions, and the lack of political will to tackle them. It also shows how local initiatives can achieve change. Most countries still lack reliable, regularly updated, population based data on the major causes of morbidity and mortality.

Why Health Matters

Cardiovascular disease, cancer, and injuries are still not covered by regular surveillance in the Eastern Mediterranean Region.4 Where data exist, poor reporting regulations and practices affect their quality and reduce the usefulness of national registries. Without such data, it is impossible to define health priorities accurately or design effective health systems, let alone assess their impact.

Data (World Health Organization)

The lack of expertise in systematic collection of data is mirrored by a lack of expertise in its analysis, particularly at governmental level. Academic research, another important component of the study of health, is neither a priority nor a necessity for career advancement in most universities in the region. Arab countries currently produce less than 0.5% of the papers that are published in the world's top 200 medical journals, in obvious disproportion to their economic and human capacities. Furthermore, good data are often poorly used because the mechanisms that connect the production of knowledge (academia) and its consumption (policy makers and the general public) are poorly developed.

Life Expectancy

All these factors contribute to what in most countries is a haphazard distribution of healthcare services. The failure of governments to provide comprehensive healthcare services has led to health care being taken over by market forces. This has transformed it into a commodity with a curative, rather than preventive, orientation. This shift in orientation means that the development of health systems has been driven by economic opportunities for providers, not the health needs of the population, and this has fueled disparity in access to ...
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