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25108: Wharram - News - Doctor famous for helping in Haiti, Peru and Russia is now heading for Rwanda (fwd)
From: Bruce Wharram <bruce.wharram@sev.org>
SF Gate www.sfgate.com
Tireless global AIDS worker
Doctor famous for helping in Haiti, Peru and Russia is now heading for
Rwanda
- Sabin Russell, Chronicle Medical Writer
Saturday, May 14, 2005
In the deeply rural and desperately poor reaches of interior Haiti that
Dr. Paul Farmer has made his home away from Harvard, people sickened with
HIV are regularly brought back from the brink of death when they visit his
clinic and begin taking antiviral drugs.
"It's a 'Lazarus effect.' That's what the people call it,'' said Farmer,
the renowned physician and medical anthropologist whose tireless work in
Haiti, Peru, the jails of Russia and the slums of Boston has set a standard
for the care of AIDS and tuberculosis among the poor and dispossessed.
Last month, in partnership with the private foundation of former
President Bill Clinton, he launched a new program to bring rural health care
and AIDS treatment to remote eastern Rwanda -- a nation rising from a
ghastly genocide a decade ago.
"We've been wanting to go there for a very long time,'' said Farmer,
relaxing Friday at the Berkeley home of a friend before delivering this
morning's commencement address at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health.
The 45-year-old Farmer, described as "a man who would cure the world" in
a profile of his work by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder, was
also in the Bay Area to receive an award Wednesday from Global Exchange, the
San Francisco human rights advocacy group.
"He's an uncompromising critic of war, poverty, violence and oppression,
because all of those things affect his patients' lives,'' said Global
Exchange spokeswoman Andrea Buffa.
Like Haiti, Rwanda is rugged and rural, impoverished, with a history of
political instability. An estimated 500,000 Rwandans are infected with HIV,
many of them women who were gang-raped during the genocide.
Despite a desire to bring his work to Africa, Farmer has previously
avoided a major commitment. He feared making a promise he could not keep.
"To work in a very poor country, like Haiti, or Rwanda, you need lots of
resources, '' he said.
But publicity from Kidder's 2003 book, "Mountains Beyond Mountains,"
drew additional attention to the work of Partners in Health, the Boston
charity that finances Farmer's work. That acclaim, commitments from wealthy
American donors, and a blossoming relationship with the William J. Clinton
Foundation based in New York conspired to bring Partners in Health to
Rwanda.
Farmer's team is already setting up shop in a location picked for him by
the Rwandan Ministry of Health.
"It's an abandoned hospital, with bullet holes,'' said Farmer.
Situated near Akagera National Park, a reserve in the eastern lowlands
about four hours from the Rwandan capital Kigali, the site is afflicted with
poverty, disease and neglect, fertile ground for Farmer's brand of
medicine --
a system that assumes health care is a human right and relies on
community health workers to deliver it.
In Rwanda, Farmer is banking on years of experience building Zanmi
Lasante, his clinic in central Haiti and on the expertise of community of
caregivers who made it work.
"The Haitians are in Rwanda, training the Rwandans,'' he said.
Despite his extraordinary success in Haiti, Farmer believes that he made
a fundamental blunder in developing his program as a private entity,
divorced from the public health system.
"It was the wrong model,'' he said. "It took us 15 years to realize our
own shortcomings. In the last four years, we've been working with the public
health sector in Haiti to make amends for our sins.''
He called it "the opposite of privatization.''
Consequently, he is working closely with Rwandan authorities in
transplanting his model to Africa, hoping to heal a broken health care
system, so that the system can heal its own.
Farmer -- whom former President Clinton recently suggested was worthy of
sainthood, or at least a Nobel Prize -- concedes there is something for him
in all this work.
"I get the satisfaction of seeing someone who would otherwise die, do
well," he said. "That is very satisfying."
E-mail Sabin Russell at srussell@sfchronicle.com.
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