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Health
crisis threatens Zimbabwe's neighbours
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports: Zimbabwe Elections No 14, 14-Mar-05)
By Fred Bridgland
in Johannesburg
March 14, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_014_3_eng.txt
The collapse of health care
services in Zimbabwe poses a serious threat to its neighbours and may
worsen the HIV/AIDS crisis in the region, according to a new report by
a southern African anti-malaria organisation.
The Johannesburg-based group
Africa Fighting Malaria says the country's serious health problems
are spilling across its borders as Zimbabweans flee political violence,
economic turmoil and poverty. More than three million Zimbabwean refugees
are in neighbouring countries. More than two million of them are in South
Africa and another 400,000 have reached Botswana.
With HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis now out of control in Zimbabwe, refugees bring with them
these rampant diseases from their home country, said the report, entitled
"Despotism and Disease: A report into the health situation of Zimbabwe
and its probable impact on the region's health".
The report, published last
week, says that at independence in 1980, Zimbabwe had an admirable healthcare
system. One of the first acts of the new government, of which Robert Mugabe
was then prime minister, was to increase spending on health by 80 per
cent, spending almost three times as much per capita than other sub-Saharan
countries. Zimbabwe had one of the highest rates of immunisation in Africa,
and life expectancy rose from 55 years at independence to 65 by 1987.
But as a result of the subsequent
collapse in healthcare and good governance, since 1987, life expectancy
has fallen by 50 per cent to barely 33 now, said the report's main
author, Richard Tren, the director of Africa Fighting Malaria. "Lives
that ordinary Zimbabweans now lead are not only shorter, but more brutish
and nasty," said Tren. "Their lives are also in peril because
of inadequate nutrition. For the first time in decades, children with
kwashiorkor [protein malnutrition] are streaming into clinics and hospitals."
Malaria, which had been a minor
health problem for decades, has exploded in recent years because of the
collapse of health services. The once highly efficient malaria control
teams "not only lack insecticides, but also cannot obtain the fuel
they require to drive into the malarial areas", said the report.
"The result of this lack of control has been a sharp rise in malaria
cases, possibly in excess of two million cases [in a population of 11.5
million] in 2004, five times higher than the low of 400,000 cases in 1992."
HIV/AIDS infection levels have
reached catastrophic levels and because of the collapse of health services,
effective treatment - which can prolong the lives of people living
with AIDS - is virtually unavailable. The United Nations estimated
that by 2003 every fourth adult was HIV-positive, but this is likely to
be an underestimate. Some 3,300 people die from AIDS-related diseases
every week, and the population of AIDS orphans has probably topped one
million.
Anecdotal evidence suggests
that the scale of the disease is substantially worse than is reported
in the country's increasingly unreliable statistical analyses. Dr
Mark Dixon of Mpilo Hospital in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city,
estimates that seven out of every ten patients he sees are HIV-positive.
Incredibly, the International
Monetary Fund believes that on current trends, 83 per cent of all teachers
alive in 2003 will have died from AIDS-related infections by 2010. Despite
the scale of this disaster, the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria last
year rejected the Zimbabwean government's application for funding
because it could not be trusted to use the money effectively.
Poor funding and administration
is exacerbated by the flight abroad of doctors and nurses. Some 2000 nurses
are estimated to leave Zimbabwe each month. Bulawayo surgeon Mike Cotton
says he can no longer carry out some of the most basic procedures because
of the flight of skilled assistants and the deterioration of equipment.
He says that a mere three general surgeons and just one gynaecologist
now serve Bulawayo's one million people. A decade ago there were
seven general surgeons, four orthopaedic surgeons, one neurosurgeon and
four gynaecologists.
The report says Zimbabwe's
health-care disaster has ceased to be purely a domestic issue.
"The exodus of Zimbabweans means that their poor health status threatens
the country's neighbouring states," it said, asserting that
refugees are transporting HIV at an alarming rate.
The report concludes, "The
failure of Zimbabwe's neighbours to respond adequately to the political
crisis and deal with the refugee problem has probably worsened the health
status of their own countries.
"It is therefore incumbent
on the SADC [Southern African Development Community] states, but particularly
South Africa, given its political and economic power, to recognise the
crisis in Zimbabwe and exert pressure on the Mugabe regime to reform,
restore democracy and reduce political violence. Anything less will destabilise
the region and imperil the health status of ordinary citizens in all neighbouring
states."
*Fred Bridgland
is IWPR's Zimbabwe project editor based in Johannesburg.
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