jueves, 9 de agosto de 2007

Go eat your chuño...and french fries.

In my efforts to kick myself back into shape before the fall frisbee season, I’ve joined the gym on the corner of my street. It’s pretty basic, with some rather old and worn looking weight machines, but the real reason I signed up was to go to spinning and some of the aerobic classes that they offer in the evenings. Last night I had my first experience in a Step class, where I proved myself to be the token white girl who had no rhythm…at least for the first half of the class. I joined the group a bit late, and then spent the next 30 minutes admiring the male teacher’s hips swaying to the blasting techno music. He was going through everything so fast that I kept tripping over my feet, and sometimes over the wooden step (it was rather unstable and flipped over a few times), until I finally figured out how to move and started enjoying the movement. Finally, I could feel the workout, which probably would have been easy at sea level, but at altitude left me feeling tired and exhilarated.

Today I made a journey to a different hospital called Juan XXIII located very, very high in the city. Due to its proximity to El Alto, the hospital sees a lot of very poor patients (even more so than the Hospital de Clínicas) with very grave conditions, a lot of time because the people wait until their conditions are very serious before they seek medical treatment. My goal in visiting this hospital was to talk to a Pneumologist about her experience with tuberculosis, and in particular how poor nutrition affects susceptibility to TB infection. I got to see a 20 year old girl with military tuberculosis, the most severe form of the disease where the bacteria spread from a lesion and infect all of the tissue and organs in your body. I also heard a 78 year old aymara woman cringe at the though of putting an IV in her neck, as she asked “Why are the doctors trying to hurt me?” She didn’t understand that the procedure was necessary for her health, and seemed to instead view it as a form of torture.

The doctora was quite overbearing in the way she interacted with the patients and the staff (she openly castigated the interns, in front of 20 people, about their medical ignorance), but it was a great opportunity to get one perspective on tuberculosis in Bolivia. I have always attributed the problem of poor nutrition to a combination of traditional food (which consists of chuño, freeze-dried potato, corn, potatoes, bread, and rice) and poverty, but the doctora asserted that the influence of western fast food practices has had a monumental effect. The traditional food that grows in Bolivia is actually quite diverse and healthy, like quinoa and fruits and vegetables, but according to the doctora, people have turned to French fries and fried chicken as the primary food because it is cheap and fast. So while “Bolivia tiene todo” (Bolivia has everything), the diet is all carbohydrate and lacks vitamins and minerals. Furthermore, the doctora seemed to think that coca chewing, especially in the lowlands, leads to poor nutrition, which leads to tuberculosis susceptibility. Coca gives you more energy and suppresses appetitive, so that people don’t feel the need to eat as often.

Her opinions raise a lot of questions and doubts in my mind. There are so many doctors here who look down upon indigenous practices, and who also criticize western medicine. While there is some merit to both of these viewpoints, I find myself in a weird position as someone who is trying to learn about aymara culture with an open mind, and as someone who is also part of an obviously problematic but nonetheless effective culture of western medicine.

I was left wondering about her blaming poor nutrition on coca consumption – she didn’t seem to consider that there are reasons that people need to consume coca, like lack of resources to buy food. Furthermore, as I think about how the poor nutrition in the campo is derived from fast food, and also as I think about the food that is actually native to the Altiplano (i.e. not fruits and vegetables). It made me start to think about the fast-food industry in the United States, not in the sense that it is responsible for obvious health problems like obesity, diabetes, and heart problems, but also in the possibility that it is making people more susceptible to infectious disease. I honestly don’t know that much about this field of study, but it’s something that I would definitely like to look into, for its obvious relation to what I am seeing in Bolivia. People here just aren’t overweight and unhealthy in the same way as the United States.

It seemed like this doctora had quite a bit of a grudge against the United States and “western ways.” Most strikingly, when I was talking about the correlation between AIDS and TB in Bolivia, something that I have witnessed repeatedly in the Hospital de Clínicas, she interrupted me and said, “AIDS, no, that’s in your country.” Everyone in the room burst out laughing at the point, but I think I was the only one thinking how ridiculous her statement was. When we were talking about protein, as well, and I mentioned that I was vegetarian, she looked at me incredulously and said “But you have to eat meat,” as if there was absolutely no other way to live. I explained to her that the meat in the United States is less than appetizing, and she scoffed and turned to her patient and said “There they inject cows with all sorts of hormones so that they grow big and fat.” While it is a true statement, the accusatory tone of her voice made me realize how her vision of the world and culture was truly uninformed.

3 comentarios:

lswhitesell dijo...

Hi - just happened upon your blog through google alerts - bolivia. I'm a gringa who's been living in Cbba for the last two years and just wanted to clear something up.

The doctora's comments are interesting, and it seems there is some truth to them, though it seems she has taken a fairly defensive tone, she may feel threatened by you - well, I'll let you do the personal analysis.

The point I wanted to make is that coca actually has surprising nutritional value. I wish I could give you a website with the info I've seen, but it's actually very rich in calcium among other nutrients. If you do some searching around I bet you could find it. It was something that really surprised me when I found out, but there have been some solid academic studies on it. Check it out.

Enjoy your time in Bolivia!

Nadine dijo...

I absolutely agree with you about coca! It definitely has some nutritive value, but nonetheless it is a complicated subject (obviously).

I found the doctora's comments fascinating, and while I think they do have some truth, my criticism was more that she presented a tremendously oversimplified analysis of certain cultural phenomenon. I would definitely like to look more into some of her points, though, especially the evolution and role of fast food in Bolivia.

georgeo dijo...

"she presented a tremendously oversimplified analysis of certain cultural phenomenon."

Nadine does that not sound like a high percentage of GENTE, no matter what the country of origin or social standing!? Such folks tend to be "right" and you wrong, no matter what the subject...!

Well - I sadly just returned to the US after two happy months all over BO. Coca is simply a green leaf among many of call it God's or Pachamama's good green leafs. It seems a pleasant luxury, curiously ver strongly featured within the daily experience and culture of the have-nots...

During my brief stay in Sopacachi on Saturday (Tarija-La Paz 24hrs-Miami, due to my 8 hour delayed AeroSur flight out of Tarija) I drank coca tea all day, chewed like a fiend, and felt pretty damn happy to be alive.

But anyway - coca obviously must contain a variety of macro and micro-nutrients, probably not unlike, say, wheat grass or any other "icky" vegetable grown on the good earth (here insert any other trendy, eco-green, VEG-alternative). I just kinda wonder what that big ol' cud in my mouuth does for your teeth, half anesthetizing them constantly! Either way I shall miss my little working class GURD of choice….

Note: Funny enough, coca chewing OBREROS, and Andalusian(???!) laziness are also associated in the minds of the aspiring “wish we were German” Bolivian middle class. FYI.

Meanwhile - how about them "Mr. Pollo", AUTOPOLLO, superPOLLO, faster food "restaurants" with their greasy pollos con mala suerte...!!! It does seem that chickens and potatoes are increasing in popularity among the more moneyed gente of the Ciudad, but all across Bolivia (especially the higher altitudes), it seems to me that life (and diet) is pretty much the same as ever (i.e., if you must eat out, you will find a sopa and comeda complette in the local Mercado, for the lowest price; and it seems that it can be awfully good and nutritious!).

Because so many more food types are available and cheaper in the Lowlands, a comparison between the diet (and attitudes) of Santa Cruz and those of the Altiplano (and its apparent highland deficiencies) is the direction one might take your nutrition inquiry.

In general la vida "mas Natural" comes to mind, versus the highly processed one of the trucked, Cisco systems of the USA….

Of course, Nadine – “How can you have any pudding if you don’t eat yer meat”…. !! Just kidding.

Stupidity and biased, uninformed crap at every turn in the road!
No matter the country!!

Geo