Your health is your wealth

Editorial

SOME people will give their vehicles the best care but indulge themselves on food that will in time cause them to go to the grave early.
We will put oil in the car’s oil can and petrol or diesel in the designated spot but instead of drinking water or healthy fruit juice, we drown our sense and money in senseless binge alcohol drinking.
Just why this is so, we can never understand.
Put it down to human nature and plain stupidity.
It is one of man’s idiosyncrasies that the rich tend to get fat than poor when one would think the rich can use their wealth to buy themselves health.
So today as PNG enjoys unparalleled economic growth and cash spreads throughout the country, the number of obese people are growing. The restaurants dedicated to fattening are raking in rich profits and a generation of people are getting sicker without knowing it.
In time, they will be keeling over from stress and ill health.
Papua New Guineans are already dropping like flies.
Many die young from preventable ailments.
And into this rather dismal forecast, our old enemies return with a vengeance and often hunting in packs.
Throughout the world, mankind’s old microbial enemies are staging a major comeback.
Old enemies are teaming up with or hitching a ride on the band wagon of new conditions.
TB, for instance, is teaming up with HIV to form a formidable team against which human medicine has found no defence, a new threat helping rejuvenate a veteran campaigner against humankind.
Each re-emerging condition is marching to a different drum, making it that much harder for the world’s health systems to cope – even with familiar enemies such as malaria, tuberculosis, or the common cold.
Tuberculosis resistant to antibiotics is rising.
Multiple drug resistant malaria is also on the rise worldwide.
The common flu, likewise, changes its coat and its level of virulence with each visit.
It will not be too long before one floats along with a virulence to kill millions as did the pandemic of 1918-1919 that killed 22 million.
For the last three months, we have been running stories in this newspaper about the state of affairs relating to coronavirus with re-emergence of TB and especially of strands that are multiple drug resistant.
The re-emergence of these old campaigners seem to correspond with the level of attention given them, more particularly the amount of resources dedicated to doing battle with them.
As the level of resources dwindle, up rears the threat.
The fight against malaria, the bane of rural Papua New Guinea, has always been hard but it was better fought in yester-years than today.
In the past there was effective public awareness and people responded to the awareness.
Now those were the days of foot patrols.
Today the technology is here to give health messages in the mass media or even over mobile telephones.
Yet, the level of health awareness has dropped off to almost nil presence by health officials.
It is time to take preventive activities to a different level.
Former Governor-General Sir Paulias Matane was a great believer in walking and took every opportunity to encourage Papua New Guineans to do likewise.
We need more of him to keep reminding us on healthy living messages to go out loud and clear.

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