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Poor diabetics priced out of treatment

Haj Saleh Al-Faqeeh, 70, turned to selling pomegranates to make money for medicine Adel Yahya/IRIN
For the past six weeks, Yemen's Ministry of Health has been running out of insulin supplies due to a lack of funds, putting many diabetics in danger or great discomfort.

Teenager Ammar was sent by his diabetic mother for insulin from the Poor Patient Medical Support Programme central pharmacy at the government's Al-Gumhouri Teaching Hospital in Sanaa. He came back empty-handed and found his mother unconscious.

"Our father died last year leaving us leaving us a YR15,000 [US$75] pension per month to live on," Ula, Ammar's sister, told IRIN.

Poor families such as this depend on the programme for free insulin, while it relies on the health ministry for its supplies.

Many diabetics in the capital have been registered with the programme for more than 10 years and receive free insulin doses. For the past month, diabetics have been queuing up for hours outside the central pharmacy in hot weather in the hope of receiving insulin shots. Some of the older sufferers have fainted in the sun.

"This is the third time the programme's staff says there are no insulin supplies to give people. I come to the centre every second day with the hope of getting an injection, but return home empty-handed," said Haj Saleh Al-Faqeeh, 70, who has had diabetes for nearly 24 years. "I have sold some of my household effects to buy insulin from other pharmacies where an injection costs YR2,500 [$12.50]. I turned to selling fruits to make money for the medicine."

Diabetics gather outside the central pharmacy in hot weather in the hope of receiving insulin shots
Photo: Adel Yahya/IRIN
Diabetics gather outside the central pharmacy in hot weather in the hope of receiving insulin shots
Market insulin inferior

Dawla Mohammed, 50, said she also resorts to buying insulin elsewhere when the central pharmacy has run out but the quality in the market is not as good. "There are Egyptian and Syrian insulin injections that cost YR1,500 [$7.50] each, but they are not as effective as the more expensive Danish insulin," she said.

Ridhwan al-Qadasi, deputy director of the programme, said it had not received any insulin supplies from the health ministry throughout July but had received 1,000 injections on 2 August. "This quantity takes a week's time to be examined by the hospital's lab before being given to patients," he said.

According to Al-Qadasi, there are 8,670 registered diabetics in the programme and up to 1,000 people register each year for free insulin injections.

"If there are enough supplies, we give away an average of 200 injections a day," he said. "For the time being, we have insulin capsules that we give to less critical cases - other than those eligible for injections - by means of doctor prescriptions."

There are two kind of diabetes: type one is diagnosed in early childhood and type two develops later in life. Patients with type one need insulin to stay alive while type two is less chronic and accounts for almost 90 percent of all cases in Yemen, according to Sharaf al-Awdi, an endocrinologist.

According to World Health Organization estimates released in 2000, there are about 327,000 diabetics in Yemen - about 1.5 percent of the country's 21 million population, 42 percent of whom live below the poverty line. However, the Yemeni Diabetic Association (YDA) says about 6 percent of Yemen's population - about 1.3 million people - have diabetes now. Supported by the health ministry and World Diabetic Foundation, YDA was established in early 2007 as the first national diabetic centre in the country.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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