|
Back to Index
Hunger
exacerbating child mortality
Ignatius Banda, Inter-Press Servic (IPS)
May 24, 2007
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37878
Judith Moyo is unable to give her child enough food.
She has to bring her 18-month-old daughter to a council clinic for
check-ups every month because of what nurses call her "slow
development".
"I give her isitshwala leftovers from the
previous night," 33-year-old Moyo says as she tries to keep
the child quiet. Isitshwala is a staple thick porridge prepared
from maize meal.
The fourth of the United Nations' Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) seeks a two-third reduction in the deaths of children
under five by 2015. But the issues related to the first MDG, the
eradication of extreme poverty and hunger, will push the reduction
of child mortality in Zimbabwe beyond the target date of 2015.
Despite President Robert Mugabe's declaration in
Zimbabwe's first MDG progress report in 2004 that the country was
achieving success in the implementation of the goals, the continued
lack of access to basic services makes this unlikely.
The World Health
Organisation's estimates for 2004 put the under-five mortality rate
in Zimbabwe at 129 per 1,000 live births. This has meant a sharp
increase since 1990 when infant mortality was estimated at 80 per
1,000 live births. In 2000, it stood at 117 per 1,000 live births.
The United Nations
Children's Fund reports that while Zimbabwe saw a decline in infant
mortality in the early 1990s, numbers have risen steadily after
2000 as health delivery services declined amid growing international
isolation.
Zimbabwe therefore remains one of a few countries
to reverse the gains made during the early years of independence.
Apart from Moyo, other women at the government clinic
also admit that they cannot provide enough sustenance for their
newborns because of escalating food costs.
Selina Zulu makes regular visits to the clinic.
She used to give her older children, who have since finished their
primary education, supplements like peanut butter. But now she cannot
do the same for her three-year-old son because of escalating prices.
"Things have changed so fast. We have had
to turn to feeding our children food which we know is not good for
them," she said amid nodding from other women gathered at
the clinic.
A nurse at the clinic says a number of children
under five have been put on supplementary feeding. They are getting
rations from the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID).
"Many of the children have been given the
anti-measles jab, but they remain poorly fed. This is our main worry,"
says Helen Dube, a nurse monitoring the feeding and vaccination.
Zimbabwe's economic decline has led to the breakdown
of the country's health delivery system. Health care is now characterised
by acute shortages of drugs and skilled personnel. This has affected
levels of measles immunisation, which is one of the indicators for
MDG 4.
In the 2004 progress report, the Zimbabwe government
promised that 90 percent of infants will be vaccinated against measles
by 2015.
But Stanford
Matenda, a researcher and chairperson of the National
University of Science and Technology's Journalism School in
Bulawayo, says the economic decline has made it virtually impossible
for the country to realise this goal. "I do not see us achieving
it."
"Just recently, government acknowledged that
nurses were not going to work. The same goes for medical doctors.
Children do not have access to food, care or medication, so it will
be difficult to attain these targets," argues Matenda.
"When parents are experiencing severe economic
and psychological hardships, it will also be quite difficult for
children to be healthy," he concludes.
Recently, Deputy Minister of Health and Child Welfare
Edwin Muguti told striking doctors that the government had no money
to meet their demands for salary adjustments.
The lack of resources to meet service delivery needs
will also affect remote rural areas. According to health officials
in the western border town of Plumtree, the measles vaccination
programme has been slowed down by the unavailability of medicine
and medical personnel.
Gertrude Chisale of Plumtree Hospital's documentation
centre says there has been a steady rise in the number of deaths
from measles as the government hospital struggles with resources.
"This year alone, we have had at least
15 deaths of children under five and we expect the number to rise
if the situation continues," Chisale tells IPS.
"We used to have motorcycles for staff to
travel to remote rural areas to do vaccinations. This has been stopped
because government says there is no money for fuel or for the maintenance
of these bikes," says Chisale.
Matenda hopes that international assistance will
become available to help vulnerable groups such as newborn babies.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|