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Tired? Hungry? ...Sick?

 
If you’re one of the more than 7,000 Australians currently Living Below the Line, you're probably starting to feel the effects of living on $2 worth of food and drink a day. I know I’m feeling tired, hungry, and if we’re being honest - a little bit grumpy as well.

But imagine if you had to add sick to this list as well.

When you survive on the equivalent of $2 a day; you can't afford for things to go wrong.

And yet something as simple as a mosquito bite can change your life.

For the 1.4 billion people living below the extreme poverty line (that's with the equivalent of $2AUD a day to cover all their daily needs, not just food); illness is a very real and constant threat.

Below the line, illness can be disastrous.

For starters, medical care is not always readily available. To access treatment you may need to find (and pay for) transport to a hospital. Often this means getting to the next major city - which can be several hundred kilometres away. The time you spend getting to the hospital then means you’re kept away from your work - and that don’t have the opportunity to earn your income for that day. Once you find medical care; that doesn’t mean its free... or even cheap. And you may be faced with a choice between eating, and buying medication. Even worse, if the person that illness strikes is the family breadwinner, the illness may leave them unable to work.

Unfortunately, limited access to basic health care and vaccinations means that people in extreme poverty are vulnerable to a myriad of illnesses - including many that young Australians have been lucky enough to be able to forget.

Let's take polio as an example.

Most young Australians will think of polio as only a vaccination. But for the poorest of the poor this is a disease that still causes paralysis and death in young children. Due to global collaboration over the past three decades, polio is now only endemic in three countries worldwide. But it continues to affect marginalised children: those in minority groups, mobile populations, remote villages or, conversely, in dense urban slums.

Once an extremely poor child gets polio, their entire future changes. Their ability to work and to access education is limited; even their chances of getting married decreases dramatically. Instead of being able to help their family work their way out of extreme poverty, their disability can lead them to be seen as a financial burden in families that are often already overburdened: deepening their cycle of poverty.

This is why the Global Poverty Project campaigns on preventable disease - we believe that no child should suffer or die from a disease we can easily and cheaply prevent. Eradicating polio, for example, would mean that more children would grow up to lead full and productive lives. And that's one effective way to reduce extreme poverty.

If you'd like to learn more about our campaigning work on polio, please visit www.theendofpolio.com.
Posted by Lauren O'Connor in Poverty for column GPP - Australia on May 10th 2012, 03:00

Comments

05/06/12 4:09pm - Posted By Adhi - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
Of course its a duh souiatitn, journalists almost always come from privileged backgrounds and as they either work for the upper class or advertisers or both, they are rarely are exposed to the real life most people live. Even when they are they really don;t have the freedom to talk about most of the time anyway. We may have freedom of the press in the won't go to jail sense but our news systems are basically about as free as Pravda As for pay, it always wise when possible to overpay people a bit. Not only are generosity and open handedness universally well regarded there are a couple of less philosophical reasons #1 It lowers demand for government services and slows the growth of the state. #2 and most important, wages are demand. I'll repeat that, wages are demand. Without a well paid population, you have no one to sell too and everyone save maybe a few leaches at the top, gets poor.
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When civil society brakes down, thugs and murderers rise up. The people of NOLA certainly decry the violence of these awful citizens who denigrate the city. BUT New Orleans is not full of people like that, many of the people evacuated were victims of these gangs of thugs. It is folly to ascribe to the whole city the actions of a few. Finally the fight for survival will bring out the worse in some people. I am so grateful to the Coast Guard who got it together early to save lots of people and the people who serve in the National Guard (and other branches) who convoyed into the city and offered hope to so many people who were simply following orders last week.
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as much prior to his departure) to get its fcaisl house in order. Also, most of the debt was run up on the watch of GW well before Obama moved in the WH. And, most of the debt run up by Obama was in fcaisl stimulus which was needed and which the prior administration requested that they continue. In fact, the economy would actually be better rather than worse had there been more stimulus. Recall, during the first couple years of the Obama administration the economy was slowly and haltingly pulling out of recession. It has been derailed over the last few months largely as a result of the earthquake in Japan and the sovereign debt crisis in Japan. Not because the democrats are spending like drunken sailors. They are not. Get a grip buddy and start reading reliable sources rather than watching Fox news all day! You should also know that modern president actually have more limited power over the economy than you might think so the blame really should not be placed squarely on any particular president but rather on serious structural problems not only in the US economy but in the global one. Chew on that for a while.
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