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Volunteer
doctors and nurses provide health care
IRIN
News
April 27, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=40774
Harare - A number
of initiatives aimed at extending medical services to the rural poor have
been launched by enterprising doctors in Zimbabwe. Many Zimbabweans are
finding it harder to pay for medical treatment as inflation of around
600 percent translates into soaring fees for private doctors and shortages
of medicines in public hospitals. Private hospitals, doctors and dentists
increased their fees by between 50 percent and 100 percent at the beginning
of April, hard on the heels of a similar price hike three months ago.
General consultation fees have leaped to almost Z$70,000, with specialist
doctors demanding Z$150,000. Deposit fees at private hospitals, which
offer better services than poorly resourced state hospitals, now range
from Z$220,000 to Z$1.6 million. Recognising the gap in health care provision
for the rural poor, a group of doctors started the Community Medical Outreach
Service Trust (CMOST), in which doctors and nurses volunteer their services,
time and expertise free of charge. The organisation extends health care
services to the unemployed and low-income groups in rural areas.
"As medical practitioners,
we are cognisant of the fact that there are thousands of underprivileged
people who cannot access medical services. The plight is particularly
marked in remote rural areas," said CMOST chairman Dr Edwin Muguti.
Since its inception in October last year, CMOST has conducted general
consultations for more than a thousand ill people in Masvingo, Mashonaland
Central and Matabeleland provinces, Chitungwiza town and Harare. The organisation
has 80 medical doctors, drawn mostly from the capital, Harare, who are
assisted by a group of nurses. The doctors include ear, nose and throat
specialists, gynaecologists, urologists and paediatricians. "Specialist
doctors tend to be concentrated in the big urban centres. They shun rural
areas because they are afraid that their surgeries might collapse, since
the general rural population lacks the capacity to pay for medical services.
In addition, rural hospitals are mostly understaffed and are inaccessible
to many," Muguti added. "We therefore decided to offer these
marginalised people, who could otherwise die due to conditions that require
simple attention, free and voluntary medical help. Busy as we are, we
have resolved to spare one day every month to do an outreach programme
in which we visit [rural] areas and attend to the sick," Muguti explained.
CMOST has also assisted
73 patients requiring specialist attention. Local communities help to
identify people needing CMOST's services, and voluntary community health
workers gather the patients at specified points for treatment by the CMOST
team. "We try as much as possible to be comprehensive and versatile.
We also try to touch base with pharmacists and drug manufacturers so that,
after we have attended to our patients, they are guaranteed of [receiving]
the prescribed drugs," Muguti said. One of the main obstacles to
the CMOST outreach programme is a scarcity of resources. "Reaching
out to needy communities is a costly exercise that requires a lot of funding.
Money is needed for transport, fuel and members' food. In addition, the
patients camp at designated points well in advance of our arrival and
they should be provided with food," Muguti explained. The Zimbabwe
Medical Association (ZIMA), to which most Zimbabwean doctors are affiliated,
runs a similar project aimed at benefiting low-income groups. Their initiative
started early this year and has so far helped about 900 people in Masvingo,
Mashonaland Central and the country's second city of Bulawayo.
"Our programme
was born out of the philosophy that we should not wait for outsiders to
help out the needy people in this country," said ZIMA president Dr
Paul Chimedza. He told IRIN that his organisation was currently negotiating
with one of the country's largest referral hospitals for the donation
of an unused operating theatre, while the army has provided manpower and
tents for visiting teams and the patients seeking medical attention. Chimedza
said his organisation had approached the corporate world for help in cash
or kind, but the "response so far was not good enough". He bemoaned
the lack of infrastructure on newly resettled farms, adding that most
general hospitals were also inadequately furnished. "Even though
we focus on rural communities, we also try as much as possible to help
the poor in urban areas by identifying poverty-stricken suburbs,"
he said. Eyes for Africa is yet another voluntary organisation assisting
those unable to afford or access health care. They conduct outreach programmes
every last weekend of the month, devoting three days to an area. "We
have been offering free eye services for a number of years, but of late
we have witnessed a growing number of people coming to us for help as
the economic situation declines and medical costs rise dramatically,"
said Eyes for Africa chairman Dr Solomon Guramatunhu. The ZIMA chairman
also told IRIN that the organisation intended to inform policy on medical
aid provision by identifying gaps during their visits, and advising the
government and other stakeholders accordingly.
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