1
597 Health in Nepal The work of the Britain-Nepal Medical Trust (BNMT) to provide health services to the Nepali people is now in its 21st year. According to the trust’s 1989 annual report,! the rebuilding and repair of damaged hostels, clinics, and hospitals after the earthquake in August, 1988, is almost complete. But another obstacle arose last April when the trade and transit treaty between Nepal and India expired: India has closed its borders with Nepal for the passage of almost all goods, although drug supplies have not yet been affected. The resulting fuel shortage has led to transport difficulties, which have had a serious effect on Nepal’s economy and development. Furthermore, people in the cities are using more firewood, which increases the already excessive deforestation. Training programmes in Kathmandu and Dharan have been cancelled, but work in the hills has been unaffected, since most transport there is fuel independent. Despite these setbacks the tuberculosis programme, which forms the bulk of BNMT’s work, is continuing successfully, and progress is being made in the drug supply and community health programmes. The female literacy programme was completed in Dhupu and Kharang and was started in other areas, and training courses were run to train literate women to teach fellow village women to read and write. That these courses were almost entirely planned and run by Nepali field staff shows that the trust’s aim to help people help themselves is being fulfilled. 1. Britain-Nepal Medical Trust. 21st annual report, 1989. Available from the trust at Stafford House, 16 East Street, Tonbridge, Kent TN9 1HG, UK. Alcohol in the workplace Many employees-perhaps as many as 1 in 10, according to Alcohol Concem-regularly attempt to carry out skilled tasks or make important decisions while under the influence of alcohol or struggling with a hangover. Moreover, twice as many days are lost through alcohol-related absenteeism as through strikes. Drinking, even (or especially) "social" drinking, is clearly a sizeable problem for employers, and Alcohol Concern has now set up a Workplace Advisory Service for those who want to introduce an alcohol policy and will tailor a programme to an individual company’s needs. A typical programme might include a presentation for senior management explaining the value of an alcohol policy; help with planning and implementing an alcohol policy; educational material about alcohol for the workforce; training for those who will run the programme; and access to counselling services to which employees with an alcohol problem can be referred. Further information can be had from the Workplace Advisory Service, Alcohol Concern, 305 Gray’s Inn Road, London WC1F 8QF, UK (telephone Ol-833 3471). Nutrition and drugs Diet and nutritional status can affect the absorption, binding, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of a drug. Dosage schedules prescribed by manufacturers (who usually have a well-nourished patient population in mind) may need to be modified for undernourished patients. This is one of the main conclusions of Dr Kamala Krishnaswamy in a review of recent studies of nutrition and drug metabolism in India.l The effects of malnutrition are by no means consistent or predictable. Food can either enhance or diminish drug absorption (Krishnaswamy reports treatment failures with tetracycline as a result of reduced absorption), drug protein binding (and hence volume of distribution) can be higher (eg, propranolol) or lower (tetracycline) in malnourished patients, and chronic nutritional deficiencies can both decrease and increase enzyme activity. Undernourished populations are also more susceptible to the toxic effects of chemicals and potential carcinogens-an argument, if one is needed, for greater concern about environmental pollution. Drug-induced nutritional disorders may further complicate and compound the problem. Dr Krishnaswamy calls for further research, since these important aspects of drug therapy are neglected. 1. Krishnaswamy K. Nutrition and drug metabolism: a review of recent Indian studies. NFI Bull 1990; 11: 1-4. Drawing criticism Newspaper editors recognise the worth of a skilled cartoonist; authors of research articles have long been wedded to the maxim that an illustration is often more valuable than a page of text; and doodles left on the telephone pad can speak volumes, even when they are no more than closely packed "isobars" (for mother-in- law ?). Yet seldom have teachers had the courage to ask students to rate lectures in artistic terms. The pluck of Hasekura and colleagues1 at the Department of Legal Medicine, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Japan, is therefore all the more remarkable. Having noted that Japanese medical students commonly find the medical ethics course dull to the point of hypnosis, the lecturers issued their pupils with attendance cards and invited them to illustrate their impressions of the lectures. Most students responded frankly and seemed prepared to draw criticisms that they would have been loath to voice, sometimes incorporating characters from popular television programmes that were unfamiliar to their mentors. If lengthy explanations that go against the spirit of the scheme are to be avoided, other teachers who adopt this approach will presumably find themselves boosting the audience ratings for Dallas. 1. Hasekura H, Fukushima H, Hiraide K. Evaluation of lectures on medical ethics through students’ drawings. Med Educ 1990; 24: 42-45. Hearty memories If you enjoy the weekly antics of the In England Now columns of The Lancet, then you should add Myocardial Medley1 to your reading list. This new anthology has been compiled with some of the manuscripts submitted by family doctors in a competition for humorous writing about the heart. These anecdotes, based on personal experiences, include descriptions of the tools of the trade, recollections of student days and general practice, and poems adapted from children’s nursery rhymes. Why do doctors wear stethoscopes? The suggestions are that, apart from the usual clinical uses, the instrument is donned to impress student nurses, to win more respect from the public and patients, to influence police officers (especially when guilty of a driving misdemeanour), or even to trace faults in car engines. And of course no doctor gets it right every time. For example, there was Dr D, who misdiagnosed his own severe chest pain as a heart attack when a wasp sting would have sufficed, and the anaesthetist who banned the wearing of nail varnish in theatre when he mistook a patients fashionable purple nails for cyanosis. And a healthy heart is yours if you take the following advice: "Curly Locks, Curly Locks, wilt thou be mine? Thou shalt not eat junk food, nor drink beer nor wine, But do thine aerobics in catsuit of silk, And dine upon muesli, stewed prunes and skimmed milk." 1. Myocardial medley. Gray IR, ed. Oxford: Radcliffe Medical Press, 1990. ISBN 1-870905-36-9. £5.95. Pp 121. Parasitology Research Centre at Imperial College The Wellcome Trust has awarded C4 million to support a new research centre in parasitic diseases at London’s Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine. Research at the new centre will concentrate on diseases caused by parasitic worms, particularly why these infestations persist in the face of immunological attack. The centre will be directed by Prof R. M. Anderson, FRS.

Health in Nepal

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Health in NepalThe work of the Britain-Nepal Medical Trust (BNMT) to providehealth services to the Nepali people is now in its 21st year.According to the trust’s 1989 annual report,! the rebuilding andrepair of damaged hostels, clinics, and hospitals after the earthquakein August, 1988, is almost complete. But another obstacle arose lastApril when the trade and transit treaty between Nepal and Indiaexpired: India has closed its borders with Nepal for the passage ofalmost all goods, although drug supplies have not yet been affected.The resulting fuel shortage has led to transport difficulties, whichhave had a serious effect on Nepal’s economy and development.Furthermore, people in the cities are using more firewood, whichincreases the already excessive deforestation. Training programmesin Kathmandu and Dharan have been cancelled, but work in thehills has been unaffected, since most transport there is fuel

independent. Despite these setbacks the tuberculosis programme,which forms the bulk of BNMT’s work, is continuing successfully,and progress is being made in the drug supply and communityhealth programmes. The female literacy programme was completedin Dhupu and Kharang and was started in other areas, and trainingcourses were run to train literate women to teach fellow villagewomen to read and write. That these courses were almost entirelyplanned and run by Nepali field staff shows that the trust’s aim tohelp people help themselves is being fulfilled.

1. Britain-Nepal Medical Trust. 21st annual report, 1989. Available from the trust atStafford House, 16 East Street, Tonbridge, Kent TN9 1HG, UK.

Alcohol in the workplace

Many employees-perhaps as many as 1 in 10, according to AlcoholConcem-regularly attempt to carry out skilled tasks or makeimportant decisions while under the influence of alcohol or

struggling with a hangover. Moreover, twice as many days are lostthrough alcohol-related absenteeism as through strikes. Drinking,even (or especially) "social" drinking, is clearly a sizeable problemfor employers, and Alcohol Concern has now set up a WorkplaceAdvisory Service for those who want to introduce an alcohol policyand will tailor a programme to an individual company’s needs. Atypical programme might include a presentation for senior

management explaining the value of an alcohol policy; help withplanning and implementing an alcohol policy; educational materialabout alcohol for the workforce; training for those who will run theprogramme; and access to counselling services to which employeeswith an alcohol problem can be referred.

Further information can be had from the Workplace Advisory Service,Alcohol Concern, 305 Gray’s Inn Road, London WC1F 8QF, UK(telephone Ol-833 3471).

Nutrition and drugsDiet and nutritional status can affect the absorption, binding,distribution, metabolism, and excretion of a drug. Dosage schedulesprescribed by manufacturers (who usually have a well-nourishedpatient population in mind) may need to be modified forundernourished patients. This is one of the main conclusions of DrKamala Krishnaswamy in a review of recent studies of nutrition anddrug metabolism in India.l The effects of malnutrition are by nomeans consistent or predictable. Food can either enhance ordiminish drug absorption (Krishnaswamy reports treatment

failures with tetracycline as a result of reduced absorption), drugprotein binding (and hence volume of distribution) can be higher(eg, propranolol) or lower (tetracycline) in malnourished patients,and chronic nutritional deficiencies can both decrease and increase

enzyme activity. Undernourished populations are also more

susceptible to the toxic effects of chemicals and potentialcarcinogens-an argument, if one is needed, for greater concernabout environmental pollution. Drug-induced nutritional disordersmay further complicate and compound the problem. Dr

Krishnaswamy calls for further research, since these importantaspects of drug therapy are neglected.

1. Krishnaswamy K. Nutrition and drug metabolism: a review of recent Indian studies.NFI Bull 1990; 11: 1-4.

Drawing criticism

Newspaper editors recognise the worth of a skilled cartoonist;authors of research articles have long been wedded to the maximthat an illustration is often more valuable than a page of text; anddoodles left on the telephone pad can speak volumes, even whenthey are no more than closely packed "isobars" (for mother-in-law ?). Yet seldom have teachers had the courage to ask students torate lectures in artistic terms. The pluck of Hasekura and

colleagues1 at the Department of Legal Medicine, Shinshu

University School of Medicine, Japan, is therefore all the moreremarkable. Having noted that Japanese medical students

commonly find the medical ethics course dull to the point ofhypnosis, the lecturers issued their pupils with attendance cards andinvited them to illustrate their impressions of the lectures. Moststudents responded frankly and seemed prepared to draw criticismsthat they would have been loath to voice, sometimes incorporatingcharacters from popular television programmes that were

unfamiliar to their mentors. If lengthy explanations that go againstthe spirit of the scheme are to be avoided, other teachers who adoptthis approach will presumably find themselves boosting theaudience ratings for Dallas.

1. Hasekura H, Fukushima H, Hiraide K. Evaluation of lectures on medical ethicsthrough students’ drawings. Med Educ 1990; 24: 42-45.

Hearty memories

If you enjoy the weekly antics of the In England Now columns ofThe Lancet, then you should add Myocardial Medley1 to yourreading list. This new anthology has been compiled with some ofthe manuscripts submitted by family doctors in a competition forhumorous writing about the heart. These anecdotes, based onpersonal experiences, include descriptions of the tools of the trade,recollections of student days and general practice, and poemsadapted from children’s nursery rhymes. Why do doctors wearstethoscopes? The suggestions are that, apart from the usual clinicaluses, the instrument is donned to impress student nurses, to winmore respect from the public and patients, to influence policeofficers (especially when guilty of a driving misdemeanour), or evento trace faults in car engines. And of course no doctor gets it rightevery time. For example, there was Dr D, who misdiagnosed hisown severe chest pain as a heart attack when a wasp sting would havesufficed, and the anaesthetist who banned the wearing of nailvarnish in theatre when he mistook a patients fashionable purplenails for cyanosis. And a healthy heart is yours if you take thefollowing advice:

"Curly Locks, Curly Locks, wilt thou be mine?Thou shalt not eat junk food, nor drink beer nor wine,But do thine aerobics in catsuit of silk,And dine upon muesli, stewed prunes and skimmed milk."

1. Myocardial medley. Gray IR, ed. Oxford: Radcliffe Medical Press, 1990. ISBN1-870905-36-9. £5.95. Pp 121.

Parasitology Research Centre at Imperial CollegeThe Wellcome Trust has awarded C4 million to support a newresearch centre in parasitic diseases at London’s Imperial College ofScience, Technology, and Medicine. Research at the new centrewill concentrate on diseases caused by parasitic worms, particularlywhy these infestations persist in the face of immunological attack.The centre will be directed by Prof R. M. Anderson, FRS.