May 4, 2008
Dr. Farmer's Remedy For World Health
Byron Pitts Meets A Man Who Dedicates His Life To Bringing Healthcare To The Poor
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Play CBS Video Video Dr. Farmer's Remedy Dr. Paul Farmer dedicates his life and career to delivering medical treatment in Third World countries, saving countless lives in places like Haiti and Rwanda. Byron Pitts reports.
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Dr. Paul Farmer, holding a young patient. (CBS)
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"There's nothing I'd rather be doing with my life," the young doctor says. "Absolutely nothing.
And it's a hard life: seven-day work weeks, including house calls. And a house call in Haiti can mean a hike up the side of a mountain.
"You walk for 30 minutes, walk for an hour, walk for four hours. The patients do it every day, why shouldn't I do it?" Walton explains.
On the day 60 Minutes was there, Walton was visiting 10-year-old Cledene, who is suffering from a damaged heart valve. Her family and neighbors showed up with their list of ailments. There are no short lines in Haiti. Some of Cledene's siblings were also sick from sleeping on a muddy floor. Including the parents, 12 people sleep in one room.
"In the scheme of poverty in rural Haiti, this is pretty bad around the lower end of the spectrum, 10 kids living in a place like this, no material possessions and a very, very sick child," Walton remarks.
Even for the well-trained this is difficult. "I can't imagine, sorry, turning my back on something like this," Walton says. "Maybe some people can, but I can't and I won't. This is my life's work."
There was no happy ending for this story. Cledene died not long after Dr. Walton's house call.
"There are always whispers about programs like this that they can't outlive the people that founded the place. That when the Paul Farmers move on, Partners In Health will be done," Pitts says.
"Paul, part of his genius is that he has set up a system that doesn't depend on his presence or absence. Haiti is run by Haitians physicians. In Rwanda the Rwandan hospitals should be run by Rwandan physicians," Walton says. "And so when the Paul Farmers of the world aren't around anymore, this place will still be here providing great care."
Asked if he knows that or just hopes that, Walton says, "I know it."
But there's no question that Farmer has been a driving force. Take AIDS, for example: in the late 1990s the disease was ravaging the people of Haiti. Conventional medical wisdom was there is no point in giving AIDS drugs to the poor in Third World countries. But Farmer wouldn't give up on his patients. He raised money and gave them drugs anyway.
Patients, like a man named Joseph, went from being very ill to feeling better. The same kind of transformation happened in patient after patient.
"When Paul started treating people in 1998 in Haiti, everyone said he was absolutely nuts. 'Impossible. Can't be done. Forget about it,'" says Dr. Jim Kim, a professor at Harvard Medical School and one of the co-founders of Partners In Health.
"And here we are, you know, not even a decade later, where the goal is to treat every single human on the planet who needs HIV treatment with the right drugs," Dr. Kim says.
Produced by Catherine Olian
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See all 42 Commentsladyharley05 and feya1: Dr. Farmer actually does some work in some of Boston''s poorest neighborhoods. Read "Mountains Beyond Mountains." Please do your research before you malign the man for providing invaluable service to some of those that the world has chosen to forget (both here in the US and abroad).
rockman107: I agree somewhat with your comment about birth control, but it is such a controversial issue in most of the countries that value children as social capital and "insurance" for old age. As I''m sure you probably know, children are a form of wealth in many cultures. I would imagine that PIH offers some birth control to those who want it, but pushing the issue would be detrimental in the long run: the organization would risk losing the trust of the people they work for. And having many kids is not necessarily the reason people die in childbirth: It''s most often the lack of adequate medical care.
Dr. Farmer spoke at my college graduation and he is the most humble, unassuming man. He''s one of my personal heroes and I can only hope to achieve half of the things he has accomplished in my own future career.
--- from http://www.pih.org/issues/maternal.html
It''s important to understand -- as PIH clearly does -- that availability of family planning is not the only barrier to its use; others include severe inequality of rights between men and women and the interplay of crushing economic conditions with the *** trade. By pursuing a broad-based approach including education, empowerment of women, and economic justice, PIH will accomplish far more than "abstinence" models or even simple contraceptive distribution could ever hope to do.
That this man''s work would elicit so many criticisms is appalling. First, a twelve minute story on TV can''t possibly explore the scope of the work of PIH. Secondly, Dr. Farmer has done more good for the world than most of us can imagine. From Mountains Beyond Mountains, I learned of some of his beliefs, and have adopted them. Poverty is violence, an abuse of human rights, and needs to be addressed as such. People who want to help a community need to respond to what that community wants, not what the helpers think they should have. People born in the US who have relative privilege have an obligation to use that privilege to help others. Just because something is hopeless is no reason not to try. This last one accounts for why the PIH model of community healthcare is now an international model for aid. At first they were laughed at. Now they''re emulated.
Finally, I personally know of several people who have been inspired by Dr. Farmer and are now doing or planning international humanitarian work. They may have done so anyway, or maybe not.
wouldn`t it be wonderful if the Elietist Barrack Obama
could learn from a fellow Hawvard graduate, the meaning of helping the poor Black People of the World,
I am suggesting that before Obama try`s running for President of the United States,
That he spend sometime in Haiti with his World Experience and help pass out drugs to the Underpriviledged.
sincerely Fuzzy Bear
What a man!
A true American hero!
Just now offering "help" in the way of knowledge rather than personal assistance to Americans is insulting. What about the millions here that are in need of medical care? Why aren''t physicians willing to do for those who helped them acquire that knowledge that they so freely give away to third world countries now? Was it any of them who gave this man his scholarships? No!
Where''s his compassion for those less fortunate - where he spent his youth? Praise should be given to those who deserve it and charity begins at home...or should!
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