Where There Is No Doctor 2011
Medicines are often used too much, both by doctors and by ordinary people.
This is unfortunate for many reasons:
• It is wasteful. Most money spent on medicine would be better spent on
food.
• It makes people depend on something they do not need (and often cannot
afford).
• Every medicine has some risk in its use. There is always a chance that an
unneeded medicine may actually do the person harm.
• What is more, when some medicines are used too often for minor problems,
they lose their power to fight dangerous sicknesses.
An example of a medicine losing its power is chloramphenicol. The extreme
overuse of this important but risky antibiotic for minor infections has meant that in
some parts of the world chloramphenicol no longer works against typhoid fever,
a very dangerous infection. Frequent overuse of chloramphenicol has allowed
typhoid to become resistant to it (see p. 58).
For all the above reasons the use of medicines should be limited.
But how? Neither rigid rules and restrictions nor permitting only highly trained
persons to decide about the use of medicines has prevented overuse. Only when
the people themselves are better informed will the limited and careful use of
medicines be common.
To educate people about sensible and limited use of
medicines is one of the important jobs of the health worker.
This is especially true in areas where modern medicines are already in
great use.
WHEN MEDICINES ARE NOT NEEDED, TAKE TIME TO EXPLAIN WHY.
For more information about the use and misuse of medicines, see Chapter 6,
page 49. For the use and misuse of injections, see Chapter 9, page 65. For
sensible use of home remedies, see Chapter 1.
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