Saturday, January 9, 2010

Blogging in the time of cholera

I was sick. Or to be completely true, I am still sick while writing this. I am laying under the sheets, drinking tea, while my head is spinning from antibiotics and other drugs they put in me...

When it comes to dealing with health and sickness, Bulgaria and Sweden are very different. My current diagnosis is a cold with lots of coughs, moderate fever and breath pains when I have coughed too much. A Swedish doctor would tell me to relax, drink tea, eat healthy stuff and call him again tomorrow if the coughs are still there. Bulgarian doctors, and it seems all Bulgarians are trigger happy, and immediately offer antibiotics, something that would be only the very last solutuions for a Swedish doctor.

And it is not only about the doctors. As a Swede I am sceptical towards medicines in general, and antiobiotics specifically. I want, and expect, my own body to conquer the disease without foreign help. It might take some days, but who has died from a flue? To help it I use ascetisism. No coffe, no alcohol. Tea and vegetables.

Bulgarians in Sweden on the other hand, despair over the doctors' reunctancy to prescribe medicine, and blames him for their diesases. I know, it sounds like a gross generalization, but it is real. Some days ago it was another Swede, with another Bulgarian girlfriend, and another Bulgarian mother in law, who fought the same battle, trying to avoid antibiotics as long as possible.

I held out for days, but eventually the fever got too big, and my Swedish method of living through it didn't seem to work. After all, I did not do it the proper Swedish way, since I didn't restrict myself from neither wine, women or coffee. So eventually I started the antibiotics cure. When in Rome, do as Romans do.

The difference inideas about health and sickness run deep. Consider this - when Bulgarians drink they raise their glasses and say "Nazdrave!", "for health". Whenever they ask each other something for birthdays or new years, being healthy is always mentioned first. "Health is the most important thing" is a common thing to say, even among young Bulgarians.

Swedes say "skål" meaning the "bowl/glass that we drink from". This skål is either accompanied with a song (that praises the bliss of drinking) or a lenghty speech aboout some individuals personal achievements, much like they do it in Georgia. If someone in Sweden wished me "a healthy 2010" I would look at him or her long, wondering what he or she meant with that. Does he expect me to get sick?

Somehow we take health for granted in Sweden. During many years, the lower living standard in Bulgaria potentially made diseases lethal in a way that they were not in Sweden. People did die. But they wished each other to be spared from this destiny, the most brutal of all. Getting treatment quickly might have been about survival in a way that it was not in Sweden.

Another thing is that it is a hell of a lot more annoyning to be sick in Bulgaria than in Sweden. Consider sitting on the bus with 40 degrees of fever in Lund, and compare that with sitting on a bus in rush hour Sofia. And if your apartment is cold, you better get better quickly, or you might get worse just as quick.

But when it comes to the doctor's prescriptions of antibiotics there is also another pattern of society which is relevant. Sweden is, in spite of repeated efforts of neoliberalisation and Europeanisation, a fundamentally socialdemocratic society, a society that sets the individual free from his relatives and close relations, but subordinates him or her under its political will.

Actually, I dont think that Swedish society is moving towards Europe any more. Is there anyone in Sweden who wants to abolish the monopoly on alcohol? I can see such individuals, but no political movement, and I think that is good actually. But my point is that the difference between Sweden and Europe is still there, and Swedes are as proud as ever about it.

Maybe it was when we understood that also Germany and France have a social democratic tradition that we settled with the way we are. Maybe these things simply can not change. It is interesting how no technical revolutions, no new governments, can really change some fundamental things in the Swedish society.

Antibiotics is actually a very good example. It is good for the individual, who gets healthy quickly, and does not have to suffer more than necessary. But it is a huge problem for society that too many people take antibiotics, as bacterias show up who are resistant etc. For a Swede it is natural that he or she as an individual pays the price for society's welfare. It would be difficult to convince a Bulgarian to sacrifice his or her happiness for society.

Or another example - the swine flue vaccine. In Swedish TV, people actually said that people should vaccinate, not for their own sake, but for society. I could somehow buy the argument that I should have vaccinated not to contaminate elderly and sick, but some people took it one step further and asked us to vaccinate to save Sweden's economy. That is not a healthy thought...

Looking at Sweden and Bulgaria, it is easy to see what these differences in society at large. Whereas most people live much better in Sweden than in Bulgaria, there is absolutely no guarantee that an individual lives better in Sweden. For those who are strong and lucky enough to create the life they want, Bulgaria is a wonderful country.

Sweden, on the other hand is clinically clean from corruption, which I think also has to do with this. Power is not vested in individuals, but in the jobs that they do. You do what the police says, simply because he is the police. You don't expect any special treatment and you don't get it - therefor you have no reason to bribe him. You respect the uniform, not the man in it.

If fact, most of the time the Swedish police doesn't even need to tell you what to do. As a people we are masters in internalizing rules and regulation, and turning them into taboos. We simply don't break rules, not because we are afraid of the police, but because we simply don't break them It must be fantastic to be a politician in Sweden.

In Bulgaria, power is brokered by specific people in specific situation. You might do as the police says, or you might not, depending on who he is. Since every situation is different, you can always improve your chanses by putting money in the right pockets. Lots of openings for individual creativity, but it is difficult to build a society like this. Imagine the ightmare of being a Bulgarian politician.

Since the politicians in Bulgaria surely do not expect people to follow their instructions, I can well understand how some of them take a bigger intrest in enrichening themselves in stead of trying to rule the country.

What goes for the police, also goes for doctors. Swedish doctors are extremely far from their patients. You have to be more or less dead before actually meeting one, and their dealing with patients is the way a civil servant deals with cases. Efficiently, distantly, always with the bigger picture in the back of their head.

We citizens, on the other hand, have internalized their instructions for a healthy lifestyle, and take on the responsibility of healing ourselves without bothering our superiors.

Bulgarian doctors, and I think doctors in many countries, have a much more personal relationship with their patients. Another relationship, where money or gifts in the right place might well improve the individuals chanses of getting what he or she want. The meeting between patient and doctor is a specific case, with a specific solution - very often antibiotics, since this is quick, cheap, and preferrable from a purely individualistic perspective.

Whatever... as long as I get healthy soon. I hate being sick, and being sick in a different country is even worse. If antibiotics is what it takes, than so be it!

3 comments:

  1. Welcome to Bulgarian reality! Good article and get well soon ... by the way, keep away from antibiotics, try herbs. :)

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  2. Thanks Ivaylo :) I am considerably better already, thanks to the antibiotics, I guess ;) But I also prefer herbs in general cases.

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  3. Hej,Daniel:) I think the article is brilliant! I'm often astonished by your observations of Bulgarian society and way of life. The fight against taking antibiotics almost everytime you catch a cold is just beginning in Bulgaria. I can assure you that it was a lot worse some 10 years ago. Now people ( or at least some of us) are more informed about the damage antibiotics can cause and try to avoid them when possible.
    Your comment about the swine flu vaccine and the way they tried to convince people to use it in Sweden - I think I laughed too much at that:) It would have never worked here, you know:)
    What I found most interesting was the part where you talk about the corruption in both societies ( or the lack of such in Sweden:) This is one thing we've discussed during some of the lectures at the university - that the institutions in a country can never be stable while the focus falls on the people carrying out the tasks. There should be rules, transparency, accountability, responsibility and the functioning of the system should not depend on the individuals but on the well structured organization. Works great in theory, but maybe (it is actually theoretically estimated) it will take about 60 years until that thing becomes reality here (even a small part of reality).
    Hälsningar!

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