Priced out of healthcare, some Iraqis turn to natural remedies
Send a link to a friend
[June 26, 2023]
By Maher Nazeh
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - When a pharmacist in Iraq told Umm Mohammed her
prescription for a skin ailment would cost about 800,000 dinars ($611),
she turned to cheaper natural remedies as some of her relatives had
done.
In a herbal remedy shop, the 34-year-old mother-of-two found a treatment
eight times cheaper. "Pharmacies are a disaster at the moment, poor
people turn to medicinal herbs because of the prices," she said. "Who
can afford this? Should one die? So you turn to medicinal herbs."
Ibrahim al-Jabouri, the shop's owner and a professor of pharmacology,
told Reuters that he is receiving customers suffering from various
health issues, such as skin diseases, bowel troubles, colon infections
or hair loss.
While some Iraqis choose alternative treatments out of conviction,
others have no other choice as they can't afford the cost of
conventional medicines.
"The economic situation the country is passing through means that the
cost of medicine is hard to bear especially for those with a limited
income," said Dr. Haider Sabah, who heads Iraq's national centre for
herbal medicine, a regulatory state body affiliated to the Ministry of
Health.
Iraq's healthcare system, once one of the best in the Middle East, has
been wrecked by conflict, international sanctions, the U.S.-led invasion
of Iraq in 2003 and rampant corruption.
Although public medical services are free of charge, a lack of
medicines, equipment and adequate services mean citizens often need to
turn to the more expensive private sector.
In recent years, Sabah has seen more herbal centres open in the capital,
Baghdad. There are now 460 establishments with a permit to sell herbal
medicines, up from 350 in 2020, according to his database.
[to top of second column]
|
An Iraqi woman buys traditional herbal
medicines at a shop in Baghdad, Iraq June 11, 2023. REUTERS/Ahmed
Saad
Standards vary greatly, from shops
selling neatly packaged and licensed products in Baghdad's
better-off neighbourhoods to more traditional herbologists mixing
plants scooped out of jars in front of customers.
"I inherited the job," said Mohammed Sobhi, who followed in the
footsteps of his brother and has sold remedies since the 1980s.
"The ones who can't afford medicine don't go to the doctor to begin
with," he added.
But replacing medical prescriptions with herbal products can be
dangerous and result in harm for patients if not administered
properly, said physician Ali Naser.
He recalled the case of a patient who had replaced his prescription
with a herbal treatment and "reached the point of what we doctors
refer to as diabetic ketoacidosis and the patient had to be admitted
to the ICU," Naser said.
At the heart of the problem is Iraq's failure to establish an
adequate medical system or regulatory framework for the country's
multitude of health service providers, he added.
According to Sabah, inspection teams monitoring establishments
selling herbal medicines have closed down 10 for serious violations
since 2019. "Most of the violations detected by the inspection teams
are corrected," he said.
(Reporting by Maher Nazeh; Additional reporting by Ahmed Saad;
Writing by Charlotte Bruneau; Editing by Ros Russell)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |