|
Back to Index
Health
sector operating in a 'war zone' environment
IRIN News
June 08, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72637
Industrial action for
better wages at Zimbabwe's major hospitals, coupled with economic
recession and hyperinflation, is resulting in the closure of critical
medical units and the descent of health services to levels more
commonly seen in a war zone, an international humanitarian organisation
says.
Last month doctors embarked
on industrial action for the second time this year, after returning
to work in March from a stay-away called late last year, in protest
against salaries that equate to less than US$1 a day.
The government has said
it hands were tied in the dispute as it was broke, an explanantion
that received little sympathy and saw ancillary departments, such
as morticians and administrative personnel, embarking on industrial
action with the striking medical staff, severely crippling public
health facilities.
The International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) recently said the deterioration of health
delivery had reached "war situation" levels. Sebastian
Brack, the ICRC spokesman for southern Africa, told a human rights
workshop in Zimbabwe's second city Bulawayo, that his organisation
was compelled to source US$4.5m to alleviate the situation, citing
the shortage of personnel, drugs and equipment as the major problems
bedeviling the sector.
He said although it was
not the organisation's core mandate in Zimbabwe, the ICRC was establishing
clinics and training health personnel across the country, a facility
normally availed to countries affected by war
In the capital, Harare,
both Parirenyatwa and Harare hospitals, the city's major referral
centres used mainly by the poor, a skeleton staff was in operation,
but vital units such as the maternity department were closed by
the industrial action and the operation of the mortuaries severely
disrupted. The hospital's kitchens were not in operation, while
a few nurses were turning people away from casualty, insisting only
cases deemed as an emergency would be attended to.
Zimbabwe's seven year
economic recession has gradually seen strike action becoming the
norm, as the more than 3,700 percent inflation rate - the highest
in the world - rapidly erodes sa"When my mother died, I was
told that I would have to help carry her body to the mortuary because
of the shortage of staff but then, that was the beginning of my
nightmare. The mortuary was overcrowded, with bodies lying on top
of each other on the floor and we had no option but to dump her
in a corner to wait for a postmortem, which has not been conducted
up to now," laries and wages for the one out of five people
who have jobs.
Municipal health workers
have also embarked on strike action, in a bid for higher wages,
in Harare and the dormitory town of Chitungwiza and similar industrial
action has been reported in Bulawayo and the eastern city of Mutare,
about 300km from Harare.
Bodies
pile-up in mortuaries
Cosmas Dauti told IRIN
about the "go-slow" at the mortuary attached to Harare
hospital, which caters for the populous and capital's mainly poor
southwestern suburbs, and the problems he had experienced with the
death of his 75-year-old mother.
His mother was admitted
to the Harare hospital seven days ago after she had suffered heart
complications, but there was no consulting doctor, only a few student
nurses supervised by a senior nurse.
"When my mother
died, I was told that I would have to help carry her body to the
mortuary because of the shortage of staff but then, that was the
beginning of my nightmare. The mortuary was overcrowded, with bodies
lying on top of each other on the floor and we had no option but
to dump her in a corner to wait for a postmortem, which has not
been conducted up to now," Dauti told IRIN.
For three days after
her death, Dauti - employed as a municipal toilet cleaner on a monthly
salary of a Z$250,000 (US$5 at the parallel market rate of Z$50,000
to US$1)- was having to feed scores of mourners gathered at the
family home.
"I strongly believe
that my mother would not have died if the situation was normal.
We are losing many of our beloved relatives and friends because
health centres are now rotten," Dauti said.
The
collapse of health services
When an IRIN correspondent
visited two Harare hospitals, under the pretence of visiting a sick
relative, he was advised by hospital staff that he should bring
food for the patient, as no food was being prepared for the sick.
Wards had not been cleaned and beds remain unmade, while the few
staff at the clinics spent their time basking in the sun.
Unemployed, Stella Ncube,
29, had registered at a relatively affordable council clinic in
the Harare suburb of Warren Park for the delivery of her baby, and
with the onset of labour pains was rushed there by her elder sister,
only to be told on arrival that there were no midwives on duty.
A midwife was traced to assist with the birth of the child, after
they had agreed to pay the midwife Z$1,5 million (US$30) for her
services.
"Even though the
delivery was carried out successfully, I am still concerned about
my child's health since he is always coughing and is refusing to
take breast milk," Ncube told IRIN. "The midwife did the
job hurriedly and my son's umbilical cord seems to be developing
an infection."
A nurse at Parirenyatwa
hospital, who declined to be named, conceded to IRIN that embarking
on strike action had been a difficult decision, "but my welfare
comes first". Junior nurses earn a monthly wage of about Z$600,000
(US$12).
"My heart bleeds
when I see a patient writhing [in pain] on the floor but cannot
get help because we are on strike. But there is a limit to charity.
I have a family to feed, children to send to school, and if I remain
on this kind of salary, we will all end up in hospital," the
nurse said.
The Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR), said in a statment
this week, that "inadequate remuneration and unacceptable working
conditions for health workers across the country have resulted in
a crisis that has left the country's major referral hospitals unable
to function."
"ZADHR considers
that it can no longer be said that the health service is near collapse.
The emptying of central and other hospitals of staff, and therefore
patients, means that the health service has collapsed," the
association said.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|