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ZIMBABWE:
Traditional healers make a killing as healthcare costs rocket
IRIN
News
August 26, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48781
HARARE - An increasing
number of Zimbabweans are turning to traditional healers for inexpensive
medical care as health costs continue their upward trajectory.
Under-resourced state hospitals and clinics charge around Zim $20,000
(US 8 cents) per consultation, but the cost at better-equipped private
hospitals is around Zim $500,000 (US $20) and patients can quite easily
run up a bill of Zim $15 million (US $615) in a week.
Gordon Chavhunduka, the director of the Zimbabwe National Traditional
Healers' Association (ZINATHA), said prohibitive medical costs had made
it difficult for the poor to access healthcare and most government and
private hospitals demanded cash upfront.
"We have, for a long time, been telling the government that they cannot
go it alone in the delivery of health. There has been a lot of tension
between the government and us over our usefulness, and it is encouraging
that they are seeing the light now," Chavhunduka told IRIN.
The authorities have been sceptical about traditional herbalists, raising
concerns that their medicines were not properly administered nor scientifically
proven, despite the Traditional Medical Practitioners Act, which was aimed
at regulating the work of 'n'angas' (Shona for traditional healer), being
passed some 25 years ago.
Minister of Health David Parirenyatwa recently publicly acknowledged that
Zimbabwe has been slow in incorporating traditional healers into mainstream
healthcare delivery.
"This is one of the few remaining countries in the [southern African]
region that does not have a proper council representing traditional healers
and their operations," Parirenyatwa told a gathering of traditional healers
recently.
He added that the ministry of health had appointed a director of traditional
medicine, who would focus on regulating the work of traditional healers.
Traditional medicine experts said the formal recognition of healers by
government was long overdue, but warned that tighter control was needed
to rein in those using unorthodox methods to treat patients.
ZINATHA has already established a team of health inspectors who carry
out nationwide checks on registered traditional healers to ensure that
they conform to the organisation's regulations.
Ironically, the difficulties facing Zimbabwe's healthcare sector have
brought a business boom to many traditional leaders.
Sekuru Chamunorwa Masamba, 60, a registered ZINATHA practitioner, is working
long hours in Harare's Rugare suburb, where he specialises in infertility
and mental illness, and claims he can help people find jobs.
Even people living with HIV are among his patients, but he points out
that while he administers herbs to deal with the symptoms of the virus,
he does not have a cure.
"I wake up at around 4 o'clock in the morning and begin attending to my
patients at 5 o'clock and usually go to rest at midnight - there is always
a long queue of people who come to me with different complaints, with
some of them sleeping at my house either because they come from outside
Harare or want to be attended to early.
"Five years ago, patients would come in trickles, but these days I am
kept busy throughout the day and people sometimes request me to work throughout
the night, but I am getting old and I also need to rest," Sekuru Masamba
told IRIN.
He often gets requests to travel outside the capital city and says even
foreigners approach him for help.
"I charge a consultation fee of Zim $20,000 and ask my patients to pay
me according to their capability. Even though I don't ask for much, I
also attract rich people and have been called to attend to sick people
in Botswana and South Africa," said Masamba, who has been practicing as
a traditional healer for the past 40 years.
Stella Moyo, 34, a teacher who had travelled from the small town of Chegutu
about 100 km from Harare, told IRIN that she decided to consult Masamba
after doctors failed to cure her persistent headaches.
"I visited several doctors but they could not help me, even though I spent
a lot of money hoping that the headaches would be cured - I would be admitted
in hospitals for weeks. But what surprises me is that the doctors said
they could not identify what was wrong and, in some cases, they did not
even have pills to relieve my pain.
"I have been here for a week and I feel much better, and what is encouraging
is that Sekuru Masamba has told me that I will pay him only when my problem
has been solved," Moyo said.
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