Most often in the news for its poverty or natural or man made disasters, such as a factory fire that killed 1,129 people in April, Bangladesh was described in studies published on Thursday as a “remarkable success story” and one of the “great mysteries of global health”.
“Over the past 40 years, Bangladesh has outperformed its Asian neighbours, convincingly defying the expert view that reducing poverty and increasing health resources are the key drivers of better population health,” said Professor Mushtaque Chowdhury from Dhaka's BRAC University, who co-led a series of studies published in The Lancet medical journal.
The rate of women dying in childbirth has dropped by 75 per cent since 1980 in Bangladesh, while infant mortality has more than halved since 1990.
Life expectancy has increased to 68.3 years - surpassing neighbouring India, at around 67 years,and Pakistan at around 66 years.
Chowdhury's team said that although Bangladesh has low health spending, its health system allows private and public sectors and non-governmental organisations to work together.
This has led to rapid improvements in access to essential services such as diarrhoea treatment, family planning, vitamin A supplementation and vaccination coverage, they said.
Success stories
An example of health success is in tackling tuberculosis(TB) - an infectious and difficult-to-treat disease with which India has been fighting a largely unsuccessful battle for many years.
The researchers found that through mass deployment of community health workers, TB cure rates rose from less than 50 per cent to above 90 per cent, among the highest in the world.
To boost contraceptive use, Bangladesh recruited female health workers to deliver door-to-door family planning services and achieved high (62 per cent) contraceptive prevalence and a rapid fall in fertility from 6.3 births per woman in 1971 to 2.3 in 2010 - rates unparalleled in similar nearby countries, the researchers said.
Pakistan's contraceptive use, for example, is around 35 per cent and its fertility rate is 3.8 births per woman.
“Promoting an open culture of research-based innovation has made Bangladesh a pioneer in scaling up community-based approaches,” said Abbas Bhuiya, a professor at Dhaka's International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, co-leaderof the study series.
But the researchers said poverty and newer problems that come with rapid urbanisation, such as an upsurge in chronic and non-communicable diseases and increasing vulnerability toclimate change, cast a shadow over the successes.
“The stark reality is that prevalence of malnutrition in Bangladesh is among the highest in the world. Nearly half of children have chronic malnutrition. Moreover, over a third the population (more than 47 million) live below the poverty line,and income inequality is widening,” said Bhuiya.
More also needs to be done to address a poorly-equipped public health sector which, although free to the poor, faces anestimated shortage of 800,000 doctors and nurses, the researchers said.
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@np: "@Zee: Indian colonialism? Did you mean BRitish coloniolism or is this is a different history that no one else but you knows about?" @Zee: "@rasgullah, Eh, Bangladesh also made this progress after freeing itself from Indian colonialism. Don’t forget that." In fact turn-around began only after Sheikh Hasina, a strong ally of India, took over. Before that, the other Begum was as surely driving Bangladesh into a ditch as Pakistan has been doing to itself ever since independence.
@Zee: Indian colonialism? Did you mean BRitish coloniolism or is this is a different history that no one else but you knows about?
The one key reason is that BD has allowed foreign, non-Profit NGOs to operate freely. In Pakistan, our idiots think that administering polio vaccine will take the manhood away from the men. Such is the backward mentality of Pakistanis up north.
Given the dire state of government funding and support for anything even close to a healthcare system, its not possible for Pakistan to carry on shunning the foreign NGOs which actually bring funding in. Local donations and NGOs can only do so much in the absence of the government funding which is responsible for the healthcare of masses. Either the government fixes its fiscal issues and puts more money into healthcare or it has to rely on foreign NGOs and their funding.
Easy choice for the "ghairatmund" Pakistanis is to fix the economy, but we are a nation of incompetent and conspiracy minded lambs. We will just sit around for the next 50 years while everyone else moves forward except us as we will be too busy blaming the West for all of our ills.
Well done BD for taking care of your people! Inch by inch inshallah, you will get to a point where idiots in Pakistan will realize that sitting, twiddling their thumbs isn't the way forward.
Us Pakistanis are a special breed. We really believe we are God's chosen so we sit and wait for the manna and salva and the assistance of angels to get us out of our dire state. We do not believe in burning the midnight oil to fix our problems. That is just not the Pakistani way!
@rasgullah,
Eh, Bangladesh also made this progress after freeing itself from Indian colonialism. Don't forget that.
nice bangladesh also has a child mortality of 48 or so india at 52...... pakistan more than 75.... infant mortality of bangladesh is also lower....india fertlity rate of 2.5 is also higher than bangladesh.... thanks to up,bihar and 3 other states.... other wise all other indian states have controlled birth well
statistics showing better situation than Pakistan.
Bangladesh has made excellent progress after freeing itself from Pakistani colonialism. If it would have been under Pakistani rule, it would be near the bottom on every social indicator.
Bangladesh has friendly relations with India and also both countries have terrorist exchange treaty........thats why bangladesh along with biggest south asian economy is taking giant strides.........I have recently heard news that world second biggest IT company the India TCS is opening its IT office in bangladesh...way to go...all the best from a canadian citizen...of pakistani origin...........we pakistanis also have a lot to think for our betterment.........