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ZIMBABWE:
Cholera outbreak stretches health service
IRIN
News
January 23, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51228
HARARE - Zimbabwe's
two largest infectious diseases referral hospitals are being inundated
by new cases of cholera, despite government claims that the situation
is under control.
A team of government and municipal health workers visited both the Wilkins
and Beatrice Infectious Disease Hospitals in the capital, Harare, this
week in a bid to ascertain the extent of the outbreak. Patients in three
wards at Beatrice hospital have had to be evacuated to make room for those
suffering from cholera.
"Something has to be done now or we will be swamped by cholera patients
in the next few days," a nurse told IRIN. "We are taking in new suspected
cholera cases every day, despite reports that the situation is under control."
Government statistics indicated that at least 14 people had succumbed
to cholera in Zimbabwe, three of them in Harare, but health practitioners
told IRIN this week that more than this number had died of the disease.
The government said 180 cases of cholera, a severe intestinal infection
caused by ingesting contaminated food or water, had been reported by health
institutions, a figure disputed by independent analysts and commentators.
Health officials at the two referral institutions said they had been told
not to divulge any details regarding admissions and deaths related to
cholera. "It was an instruction from the ministry that no hospital authority
should release any information on cholera," said an official at Wilkins
Hospital.
Precious Shumba, a spokesperson for the Combined Harare Residents' Association
(CHRA), said according to information they had compiled, 40 people had
succumbed to cholera since the outbreak began three weeks ago.
"According to our information, the cholera-related deaths are pegged at
40 - the authorities are just under-reporting the seriousness of the outbreak
because they are partly to blame for the outbreak," Shumba alleged.
He called for the dissolution of the Harare Commission, led by Sekesai
Makwavarara, which was appointed by government to run Harare after sacking
the popularly elected mayor, Elias Mudzuri, in early 2004.
"Cholera will continue to claim more lives in Harare because people are
exposed to unsafe drinking water, raw sewage, and live with garbage which
has not been collected for months on end," Shumba told IRIN.
The president of the Zimbabwe Medical Association (Zima), Dr Billy Rigava,
said cholera could not be controlled as long as there were mountains of
uncollected garbage in Harare and raw sewage continued to flow in residential
areas.
"It's not possible to eradicate cholera when people are still drinking
contaminated water and flies are hovering around their food daily because
of uncollected rubbish," said Rigava.
He noted that the outbreak was a clear indication of the collapse of the
country's public services, and urged the commission to provide clean running
water and collect refuse.
The Harare City Council has been battling to collect garbage and provide
clean running water, and some Harare residents have resorted to digging
wells or fetching water from unprotected and polluted streams, exposing
themselves to waterborne diseases.
Council officials have blamed shortages of fuel and foreign currency,
and outdated equipment for the current situation. At present the city
has 14 refuse collection trucks in operation instead of the required 90.
According to Harare town clerk Nomutsa Chideya, "The problem is fuel -
we used to receive 30,000 litres of diesel a week but now we are only
getting 10,000 litres a week to service the entire capital."
A recent council report said water being delivered to Harare homes did
not meet the specifications of the World Health Organisation (WHO) and
the Standards Association of Zimbabwe. However, Munacho Mutezo, the Minister
for Water and Infrastructure Development, maintained that the water quality
was of acceptable standard and water cuts were less frequent.
"Things are changing for the better, because residents who used to go
for weeks without water are now accessing water within two days," he commented
to IRIN. "Water released from the treatment works consistently meets WHO
guidelines."
Deputy Minister of Health Edwin Muguti told IRIN that his ministry was
distributing chlorine tablets to contain the disease outbreak. "Cholera
is now under control because we are not receiving any new cases," he said.
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