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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Zimbabwe Briefing - Issue 94
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
(SA Regional Office)
October 03, 2012
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Maternal
Health: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back
To some of us
who are in human rights work the move to scrap maternity fees from
all provincial and central hospitals countrywide to ease pressure
on underprivileged expecting mothers was a plausible effort from
central government. However what had seemed like a moment worth
celebrating for many Zimbabweans can be a pie in the sky if we fold
our hands.
Human rights
activists have for long been advocating for the government of Zimbabwe
to respect, protect and fulfil the right to health and particularly
maternal health through increased access to health care facilities
by pregnant mothers. Maternal and child health care is a key element
of the right to health. This is in sync with the human rights principles
and the Campaign on Accelerated Reduction of Maternal mortality
in Africa (CARMMA) under the theme "Zimbabwe Cares: No Woman
Should Die While Giving Life!" launched in 2010 and spearheaded
by the Hon. Deputy Prime Minister, Thokozani Khupe. The programme
feeds into Zimbabwe's MDG target for the maternal mortality
rate of 174 per 100 000 live births.
Faced with a
high rate of maternal mortality and the need to respond effectively
to the growing concern, the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare
scrapped user fees for pregnant women starting July 2012. According
to the Zimbabwe Demographic Health Survey (ZDHS 2010-2011), the
country has a Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR) as high as 960 deaths
per 100 000 live births. An upward trend can be seen as statistics
from the 2010 Millennium Development Goals status report that show
that in 1994 the MMR was 283 per 100 000 live births, rising to
695 in 1999 before declining to 555 between 2005 and 2006 and 725
deaths per 100 000 live births in 2007 according to the Zimbabwe
Maternal and Perinatal Mortality Study (ZMPMS, 2007).
The Ministry
of Health embarked on what can be called a noble initiative in terms
of increasing access services but whose undertaking and implementation
manifest the failure by the ministry to carry out a feasibility
study to determine the extent of the problem and its capacity to
respond effectively. In a clear act of poor judgement and desire
to score political gains, the Ministry officials in their wisdom
failed to act appropriately.
The Ministry
was and is aware that in the 2012 National Budget
the Minister of Finance Hon. Tendai Biti allocated only US$345,
6 million which amounts to 8.6% of the total national budget and
more than 6% below the Abuja Declaration recommendation of 15% of
the total budget. The 8.6% would only allow for around $ USD19.70
per capital income which falls short of the minimum WHO guidelines
of USD34 per capita income.
As policy makers
and implementers the government is aware that the high mortality
rate has been accelerated by failure to afford medical care by the
majority of women. They are also aware of the carrying capacity
of state health institutions and the staff levels, particularly,
the midwives and inadequate financial resources. With that in mind
the government officials should have taken an incremental route
instead of the radical policy shift since such policy changes required
radical changes on the grant.
From the day
of the policy inception, Harare Central Hospital maternity wing
is reported to have failed to cope with the surge in numbers of
pregnant women as it can only accommodate 180 people at any given
time, but had become over-stretched after admissions began averaging
70 per day. Such is a clear case of a possible implication that
was not well thought of. Further to that, the Ministry officials
were quite aware when they made the decision that staffing levels
are compromised at most if not all state health institutions. According
to the UN-FPA in the ZDHS (2012-2011) only 22 percent of posts for
midwives were filled. With such a scenario imagine the quality of
services that will be offered when the expected average figures
are surpassed. What boggles one's mind is why someone entrusted
with the nation's health would pursue a policy that is counterproductive
without assessing all imperatives and which in all respects lacks
a semblance of sustainability. Be that as it may, the temporary
policy shift exposed the government and the nation at large to the
inadequacies of the health vote and the need to increase the health
allocation in subsequent years. The government should make the health
sector a priority. If the government work with 15% in line with
the Abuja Declaration as a benchmark policy makers should be able
to cover ground in the progressive realisation of the right to health.
Right now the debate and focus is being limited to the failure of
the government to meet the international targets as the primary
cause of the government's failure to provide adequate health
care to pregnant women.
The GNU
has been extravagant with resources in splashing huge sums of money
in purchasing luxury and top of the range vehicles. The inclusive
government also gobbled US$45 million in foreign travel in 2011
alone according to Minister Biti. This is all at the expense of
service delivery. In this light, as health rights activists who
were active in push-ing for the right to health in the new constitution,
we are buoyed by the possibility of the right being enshrined in
the New
Constitution of Zimbabwe. The Copac draft
enshrined the right to health in the Bill of Rights in Chapter 4
Section 28. The move is positive. From this desire is to up our
tempo using the constitution to demand the respect, protection and
fulfilment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental
health for all Zimbabwean.
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