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Zimbabwe's
health time bomb
Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Zimbabwe Elections, No. 31, April 29, 2005
By Chipo Sithole in Harare
April 06, 2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_031_1_eng.txt
Zimbabwe's isolation by
the West following the recent disputed parliamentary election, in
which President Robert Mugabe's Zanu PF clinched a two-thirds majority,
has accelerated the decline in living standards of ordinary people.
Although every
aspect of life is affected by the implosion of the economy, the
already ailing health sector has been hit hardest.
A crippling
manpower shortage - as doctors, nurses, pharmacists, radiographers
and laboratory technicians quit in large numbers to take jobs abroad
- has combined with an inadequate supply of essential drugs in the
midst of a ravaging HIV/AIDS pandemic to throw the country's health
delivery system into disarray.
The general
economic decline, which has seen the country's gross domestic product
decline every year for the past seven years, has hastened the departure
of qualified medical personnel, leaving junior doctors and nurses
and trainees to run the country's collapsing health institutions.
At Masvingo
General Hospital, which serves hundreds of thousands of people in
an area 300 kilometres south of the capital Harare, only two doctors
are still in service. The country's health ministry has decreed
that 14 doctors are the absolute minimum necessary to serve the
needs of the people.
In addition,
the hospital's infrastructure is collapsing. An awful smell emanates
from the dimly lit morgue, as its refrigeration system broke down
several weeks ago and cannot be repaired because of lack money and
spares.
Maggots are
now devouring the bodies, including that of Petros Jeka, an activist
for the Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, who was allegedly murdered
by youths loyal to the ruling ZANU PF party three years ago. No
post-mortem has been carried out on Jeka's body, as required before
any trial can be held, because all the pathologists have left.
In addition
to the flight of health professionals, the hospital's boilers and
laundry machines have broken down. The toilets have ceased to work
because of lack of spares, and junior nurses carry water buckets
to flush them.
A senior hospital
official, who declined to be named, said, "We are failing to cope
because we are understaffed and the situation is worsening by the
day. If this continues, we are heading for disaster."
Reports to the
health ministry from Marondera General Hospital, 80 kilometres southeast
of Harare, say rats are devouring corpses awaiting collection from
the morgue, where again the refrigeration unit has broken down.
The situation
makes a cruel mockery of ZANU PF's slogan during the first decade
of independence - "Health for All by the Year 2000".
Many doctors
and nurses who have left the country say they took the painful decision
to go because patriotism does not put food on the table. Senior
state hospital doctors earn little more than the equivalent of around
100 US dollars a month, while nurses' salaries are around one-third
that level.
"How can nurses
work for peanuts while others live lavishly with hefty salaries
and good perks?" said a nurse, now working in the United Kingdom
but visiting her family in Harare.
Declining to
be identified, the nurse told IWPR, "If you continue to labour in
Zimbabwe today, you won't achieve anything in life. You will be
working for food only.
"I have managed
to buy a house and a car in the short two years I have worked in
London. If I had remained here, I would never have bought them."
Low morale has
taken a toll in health institutions countrywide. In rural areas,
it is common to find health staff at clinics basking in the sun
or doing their own private work because the centres have little
equipment and drugs are in short supply.
The United Nations
Children's Fund, UNICEF, says the general decline in health services
has been exacerbated by the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Its statistics
show that the under-five mortality rate has risen 50 per cent since
independence in 1980. A spokesman said that one Zimbabwean child
dies from AIDS-related infections every 15 minutes, while each day
an estimated 100 babies are born HIV-positive from infected mothers.
UNICEF predicts
that by the end of this year, some 160,000 children will have recently
lost one or both parents to the syndrome, taking the AIDS orphan
population to nearly one million in an overall population of just
11.5 million.
Lovemore Kadenge,
chairman of the semi-autonomous Hospitals Association Trust that
monitors delivery of services at state hospitals, said every hospital
doctor is now doing the same work that five years ago was performed
by at least seven doctors.
At Chitungwiza
Hospital, on the outskirts of Harare, a single doctor has the impossible
task of coping with 300 casualty and outpatient cases each day.
Kadenge said the doctors' and nurses' workloads were multiplied
because their departments are not computerised to help with administration.
Dr Agnes Mahomva
is one of only two doctors at a rural hospital serving a quarter
of a million people at Glendale, 100 km north of Harare. Inside,
three-quarters of the beds and many pallets on the floors are filled
with gasping emaciated people with AIDS.
Dr Mahomva is
one of the diminishing number of doctors who refuse to give up.
"As a technical person, I could go out and bang my head, or I can
say, 'What is it that I can do?'" she said. "There is still a lot
we can do with the little we have."
The Reserve
Bank tried recently to throw a thin lifeline to the collapsing health
sector. It allocated a million dollars of scarce foreign exchange
to the state's National Pharmaceutical Company, NatPharm, to purchase
drugs to supply public sector health institutions for the next nine
months.
But even the
Reserve Bank itself admits this is an inadequate sum when measured
against the scale of the need. And against a background of widespread
hunger and food reserves that have almost run out, foreign currency
will in future have to be diverted to grain purchases in an attempt
to avert widespread starvation.
While hospital
conditions deteriorate, the Community Working Group on Health, CWGH
- a network of non-governmental civic groups - has described overcrowding
and lack of proper sanitation in poor areas of Zimbabwe's cities
a health "time bomb".
Itai Rusike,
CWGH's executive director, said overcrowding in Harare's high-density
poor suburbs had reached crisis levels, creating potentially "explosive
disease epidemic situations". Ailments such as scabies, last reported
more than a quarter century ago, are reappearing, he said.
"This is a classic
indication of the collapse of the health sector. It is a time bomb,
a huge problem indeed," he added.
Ngoni Mudege,
the engineering director of the Harare-based Institute of Water
and Sanitation Development, said that in the capital's teeming suburbs,
some houses designed to accommodate families of six were housing,
on average, more than fifteen people.
He added that
as a consequence of the overcrowding and lack of investment, the
capital's sanitation systems are breaking down, with waste piling
up in sewage pipes. He told IWPR that many toilets no longer flush
and said that in one area, some 1,300 people were sharing one communal
toilet.
Bill Saidi,
a distinguished Zimbabwean journalist who edited the Sunday edition
of the Daily News until it was banned last year by the ZANU PF government,
said that he was shocked by his recent visits to Harare's two main
hospitals, Parirenyatwa and Harare Central.
"The hospitals'
decline struck me as almost inexorable, as incurable," he said.
"They were not
pretty sights, and I came away wondering if this was not the beginning
of the end of the world."
*Chipo Sithole
is the pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Harare.
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