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Doctors
protest condition of health system
IRIN News
November 07, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56274
BULAWAYO - Doctors
in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, have gone on strike to protest
against deteriorating health services characterised by widespread
shortages of drugs, food and equipment.
The stayaway,
which started on Monday, is expected to spread to other parts of
the country during the course of the week.
"It has become
very difficult to work with basically nothing to use in all departments;
it is disappointing to watch patients deteriorating in a hospital,
as no help can be given to them," medical practitioners at the city's
two main referral centres, Mpilo Central Hospital and United Bulawayo
Hospitals, said in a statement.
"Doctors took
an oath to save lives, and do not want to continue lying to patients
that they can do something for them when they know very well there
is nothing they can do, as the hospitals can no longer function."
The striking
doctors said there was virtually nothing to administer to patients
at the two hospitals, and the situation was the same in government-owned
health institutions across the country.
Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights, an NGO, indicated in
a recent statement that the country's health facilities had "in
fact become death traps, as patients continue to die unnecessarily
due to drug shortages." In some instances hospitals had no running
water.
Officials have
acknowledged shortages of key drugs in the recent past.
The health delivery
system has virtually collapsed in the last seven years due to lack
of foreign exchange to purchase medical requirements and a shortage
of qualified personnel, who have fled low pay and poor working conditions
for greener pastures in other countries.
Zimbabwe is
going through a severe economic crisis, with serious fuel and food
shortages brought on by recurring droughts and the government's
fast-track land redistribution programme, which have disrupted agricultural
production and slashed export earnings.
Doctors in the
Bulawayo hospitals were also concerned about the quality and quantity
of food being given to patients, and claimed that malnutrition was
rampant in government health institutions. At least five patients
at the Ingutsheni Hospital for the mentally challenged in Bulawayo
died last month after allegedly being diagnosed with malnutrition.
The Zimbabwean
deputy health minister, Edwin Muguti, confirmed the five deaths
at the hospital, but said the authorities had yet to establish the
cause.
"There is basically
no food to feed the sick, yet it is only natural that patients need
to eat for their conditions to improve. This is worrying us so much,
and we demand that government sets its priorities right and starts
working towards rebuilding the health sector," the doctors said.
There was no
comment from the Zimbabwe Doctors Association, which officially
represents the country's medical practitioners.
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