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Self-Care Health Interventions - WHO Guidelines

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July 02, 2019

Why in news?

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has recently launched its first guidelines on self-care interventions for health.

What is self-care?

  • Self-care would mean the ability of individuals, families and communities to access health care with or without the support of a health-care provider.
  • This may include promoting health, preventing disease, maintaining health, and coping with illness and disability.
  • The practice of self-care has been there for long.
  • But now, increasingly, there are new diagnostics, devices and drugs that are transforming the way common people access care.
  • Self-care interventions are thus gaining more importance now than before.

What are the recent WHO guidelines on?

  • In its first volume, the WHO guidelines focus on sexual and reproductive health and rights.
  • Some of the interventions include -
      1. self-sampling for human papillomavirus (HPV) and sexually transmitted infections
      2. self-injectable contraceptives
      3. home-based ovulation predictor kits
      4. human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) self-testing
      5. self-management of medical abortion
  • Self-care neither replaces high-quality health services nor are they a shortcut to achieving universal health coverage.
  • Instead, the guidelines look at the scientific evidence for health benefits of certain interventions that can be done outside the conventional sector.

What is the need for self-care?

  • Millions of people, including in India, face the twin problems of acute shortage of healthcare workers and lack of access to essential health services.
  • WHO reports that over 400 million across the world already lack access to essential health services.
  • Also, around 1 in 5 of the world’s population could be living in settings that are experiencing humanitarian crises.
  • Reportedly, there will be a shortage of about 13 million health-care workers by 2035.
  • So, self-care offers the possibility to meet the health care needs with or without reliance on health-care workers.

What is the WHO’s observation?

  • Self-help would mean different things for people living in very diverse conditions.
  • For people of the upper strata who have easy access to healthcare facilities, self-help would mean convenience, privacy and ease.
  • In contrast, for those living in conditions of vulnerability and lack access to health care, self-help becomes the primary, timely and reliable form of care.
  • These include people who are negatively affected by gender, political, cultural and power dynamics and those who are forcibly displaced.
  • Given this, the WHO recognises self-care interventions as a means to expand access to health services.
  • So soon, the WHO would expand the self-help guidelines to include other self-care interventions.
  • These could include prevention and treatment of non-communicable diseases.
  • WHO is also establishing a community of practice for self-care, and will be promoting research and dialogue in this area.

Where does India stand in this regard?

  • India has some distance to go before making self-care interventions for sexual and reproductive health freely available to women.
  • Home-based pregnancy testing is the most commonly used self-help diagnostics in this area in India.
  • Interventions also include self-managed abortions using approved drugs that can be had without the supervision of a healthcare provider.
  • E.g. morning-after pills taken soon after unprotected sex, mifepristone and misoprostol taken a few weeks into pregnancy
  • While the morning-after pills are available over the counter, the other two are scheduled drugs that need prescription from a medical practitioner, thus defeating the very purpose of the drugs.
  • The next commonly consumed drug to prevent illness and disease is the pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention.
  • India is yet to come up with guidelines for PrEP use and to include it in the national HIV prevention programme.
  • The WHO has approved the HIV self-test to improve access to HIV diagnosis in 2016.
  • But despite this, the Pune-based National AIDS Research Institute in India is still in the process of validating it for HIV screening.
  • One of the reasons why people shy away from getting tested for HIV is the stigma and discrimination associated with it.
  • In this context, the home-based testing provides the much-needed privacy.
  • India has in principle agreed that rapid HIV testing helps to get more people diagnosed and opt for treatment, thus reducing transmission rates.

 

Source: The Hindu

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