Jamaica Gleaner

Politics or just politricks

- Tony Deyal was last seen thinking about Doctor Bell who fell down the well and broke his collar bone. Doctors should attend the sick and leave the criminals alone. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com

Dedicated to all medical doctors in the Caribbean

FOUR SURGEONS sat around discussing their favourite patients. The first surgeon said, “I like operating on librarians. When you open them up, everything is in alphabetic­al order”. The second surgeon disagreed, “I like operating on accountant­s. When you open them up, everything is in numerical order”. The third surgeon claimed, “I like operating on electricia­ns. When you open them up, everything is colour coded.” The fourth surgeon insisted, “I like operating on politician­s.” The other three surgeons looked at each other in disbelief. The fourth surgeon continued, “Because they’re heartless, gutless, spineless, and the ass and head are interchang­eable.”

So much for politics, but what about politricks? The Trinidad Prime Minister, Dr the Honourable Keith Rowley (PM), announced a plan to declare crime in Trinidad and Tobago as a public health issue. The heads of government of the region agreed so that doctors, especially, are catching even more health than ever. According to the Pan American Health Organisati­on (PAHO), “Trinidad and Tobago faces intricate challenges at the crossroads of politics and health. Striking a harmonious balance requires collaborat­ive efforts, evidence-based policies, and a commitment to the well-being of citizens.” In other words, you don’t push one inside the other.

GAMUT OF BLAME

One of my friends went through the gamut of blame by the PM: “First he blamed the Opposition. Then he blamed the women and followed by blaming all of us for not pulling our weight”. Worse, the PM then said that “Crime will topple the government”. He called on churches (not the one popping flavours and selling Texas Chicken) to do their bit. Then he blamed the police and when that failed, he dropped it on us, the public, again with “Citizens turning blind eye to crime.” This confirmed my belief that politician­s and diapers have one thing in common: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reason. If politician­s want crime with lots of murders to be considered a “health” issue it will be “pubic” instead of “public” and should really be with the new born babies. After all, politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnos­ing it, and then, as in this case, misapplyin­g the wrong remedies.

What is worse is that T&T is facing a growing burden of noncommuni­cable diseases such as heart problems, strokes, cancers, diabetes and chronic lung diseases. They account for over 62 per cent of death with three-quarters occurring in people under 70. To Jamaica, add cardiovasc­ular disease. And for Barbados, put in tobacco, overweight and obesity. Given all that, you’re adding crime? It is like when a surgeon, an engineer and a politician were discussing which of their profession­s was the oldest. The surgeon said, “Eve was created from Adam’s rib – a long surgical procedure.” The engineer replied, “Before Adam and Eve, order was created out of chaos, and that was an engineerin­g job.” But the politician insisted, “Yes, but who do you suppose created the chaos?” That is T&T and some of the other Caribbean countries for you. They will never learn or change.

In the Caribbean if you stay in one place long enough you will either be stolen and dumped somewhere else, or you will keep on seeing the same thing coming at you over the years but getting worse all the time. In an article I posted on December 4, 2002, ‘Bad to the bones’, I commented on the reopening of the Accident and Emergency Department of the Port of Spain General Hospital. It read, “Casualty back in operation with a skeleton staff.” At first, I thought it was a hoax or an attempt to delude the public, or what Trinis call, “trying a skull”. However, in reading further, I realised that the story was true and I was almost moved to write a letter of commendati­on to whoever had conceived such a brilliant idea.

SKELETONS

Skeletons are ideal for such an operation. First of all, security would be boned up rather than beefed up. Normal human beings, as well as the people who frequent casualty department­s, would not be able to breach the hospital’s defences, or gain entry unlawfully, because only the people in charge would have skeleton keys. Make no bones about it, a skeleton staff guarantees transparen­cy. Skeletons might be numbskulls, or boneheads, but they are too smart to steal food from the cafeteria or towels from the laundry. Additional­ly, you cannot pin anything on them for stealing and selling body parts to private institutio­ns. Also, by using a skeleton staff the problem of the overcrowde­d mortuary will be ended. After all, skeletons are people with their outsides off and insides out. While skeletons may have some difficulty in standing up for themselves, they don’t bow to pressure or knuckle under despots, doctors or dictators. Even though some might be lazy bones, most of them work very hard.

On the down side, they might be messy. One of them went to the cafeteria and ordered a cup of coffee and a mop. Another refused to work at the hospital because its heart wasn’t in it. One refused to attend the welcome party put on by the Ministry of Health because it had no body to dance with. And when one reached very late for work and tried to lie, explaining that it was chased by a dog, its supervisor said, “Don’t try that. I can see right through you.” Skeletons are easy and cheap to maintain. They don’t use the cafeteria food because they have no stomach for it and nothing gets under their skins. They are very studious and are always boning up for exams. They don’t get angry and back down because they don’t have the guts to fight. On Sundays they stay on the job instead of going to church. They have no organs. They don’t take coffee breaks. They take coffin breaks.

There is no question that the use of the skeleton staff at the Accident and Emergency Department will reduce the present excessive demands on the limited resources of the Hospital. This way doctors will be in paradise. They will have more time for their private practice and the Ministry of Health would have more money to spend on the really important things such as attending internatio­nal conference­s. I would really like to see the idea of employing skeleton staff extend to other Ministries throughout the Caribbean. Most Government Ministers already have the basic resources and need only the political will to implement the new strategy. They all have skeletons in their cupboards. Some even prefer mummies to skeletons because they like to keep everything under wraps.

In 2010, eight years after I wrote the column, a Chinese firm was hired to build the new hospital block. Then, not too long ago, and after another ten years, the Chinese “shanghaied” the project and left. Now, in 2024 the same project will be “on target” by March/April 2025. By that time, the criminals, instead of being police targets, would have targeted, with the help of the police, the doctors, hospitals, drugs and their own nurses.

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 ?? ?? Tony Deyal
Tony Deyal

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