Page 291 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 291

Chapter Seven

                  Medical facilities
                  In 1949 an Indian Muslim, Dr Muhammad Yasin, practising in Dubai,
                  who had been employed by the British Government in India,   was
                  succeeded by Colonel D. McCaully, a doctor who had retired from the
                  Indian Army. Dr McCaully was engaged by the British Government
                  to run the first hospital on the Trucial Coast (the Maktum Hospital,
                  opened in 1950 with 38 beds), built in Dubai for the benefit of the
                  population of all the Trucial Stales. The cost of the initial building
                  with 38 beds and the cost of a doctor were borne by the British
                  Government; the running costs were shared among all the Rulers of
                  the Trucial Stales, the biggest share being paid by the Ruler of
                  Dubai/16 All the Rulers were members of the A1 Maktum Hospital
                  Committee.47
                    The impact which the development of the health services has had
                  on the quality of life in the City State for almost every one of its
                  residents is illustrated by the fact that before the Second World War
                  a sick person who needed modern medical help had to travel by boat
                  to India, which few inhabitants of Dubai could afford. Now people
                  travel to Dubai from neighbouring countries to obtain treatment in
                  the Rashid Hospital. Yet a large hospital does not provide the full
                  answer to health care among the local and immigrant communities
                  whose health problems were and sometimes still are the result of
                  draughty homes, indigenous pests, and a lack of appreciation of
                  hygiene.
                    In parallel with the building of hospitals all the other aspects of a
                  modern health service were being attended to. The government of
                  Dubai, the Trucial States Council and international agencies such
                  as the World Health Organisation organised mass vaccination,48
                  regular checks on school children, and public health education
                  programmes; the municipality improved on rubbish collection,
                  pest control and food-handling standards in the market and the
                  slaughterhouse; and eventually the new media, radio, television, and
                  newspapers, were used to instil an awareness of the causes and the
                  remedies of ill-health. In the planning of health care facilities in
                  Dubai it was essential to take into consideration the structure of the
                  society and the difference in altitude between the local and the
                  various immigrant communities. Even after the well-equipped
                 Rashid Hospital was opened,40 many people still preferred to go to
                 the old-established, centrally-located, smaller Maktum Hospital or to
                 an outpatient clinic built in the centre of Dubai. During the 1970s

                 266
   286   287   288   289   290   291   292   293   294   295   296