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Medical
fees hike the "final nail"
IRIN News
November 16, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=75340
As Zimbabwe's economic
woes continue to load a mounting burden on an already weakened health
delivery system, recent hikes in doctor's fees have now moved even
basic medical care beyond the reach of most.
"Because of the
constant rise in medical costs and the sorry state of the economy,
access to healthcare is becoming a pie in the sky for the poor,"
Murisi Zwizwai, member of parliament for the main opposition Movement
for Democratic Change party, told IRIN. "Healthcare is now
almost the preserve of the rich."
The Association of Healthcare
Funders of Zimbabwe, an independent organisation that sets medical
costs with the approval of government, recently announced new consultation
and laboratory test fees, adding to the financial squeeze that most
Zimbabweans feel.
According to the state-run
Herald newspaper, doctors' consultation and laboratory fees have
increased 10-fold in some cases. "General practitioners are
now charging between Z$3 million [US$2.3] and Z$5 million [US$3.85]
a visit, up from Z$500,000 [US$0.38] in June. Physicians and paediatricians
are now charging an average of Z$8 million [US$6.5] per consultation,"
the Herald said.
Zwizwai, who is also
a member of the parliamentary committee on health and child welfare,
said "the increases, steep as they are, might be justified
in order for those that provide health services to remain viable,
but the tragedy is that the sick, particularly those that belong
to the 80 percent of people living on less than a [US] dollar a
day, have been dealt a body blow."
Zimbabwe's economy is
buckling under the highest inflation rate in the world - nearly
8,000 percent - unemployment levels of 80 percent, and acute shortages
of basic foodstuffs, fuel and electricity. The public health system
has been crippled by a lack of foreign currency, making it unable
to replace ageing hospital equipment and essential drugs, while
many medical personnel have left for better-paying jobs abroad.
"The poor now have
no option but to trek to government hospitals and clinics, but then
these institutions are overwhelmed and suffer severe shortages of
drugs, nurses and doctors," Zwizwai commented.
"While there is
a need to factor in costs in delivering services, there is nothing
that supersedes the value of life," he added, referring to
a number of institutions that have started refusing care to patients
who do not have the cash to pay for treatment upfront.
Most
vulnerable bear the brunt
"Vulnerable families,
such as the ones that are headed by children owing to a variety
of reasons but mostly orphaning through the HIV/AIDS epidemic, have
been presented with a serious challenge in the wake of the rise
of medical expenses," Zwizwai said.
Estha Mugoni 17, who
lives in the capital, Harare, became a 'parent' and the family's
only breadwinner last year after her father died in an accident
at a factory and her mother left with another man. She now looks
after two sisters and the youngest, 10 years old, recently developed
a tumour in her abdomen that requires specialist attention. Mugoni's
cleaning job means the treatment is well beyond their financial
reach.
"I am at a loss
as to what I should do. I am struggling to fend for my sisters on
the salary that I receive. We cannot have enough food and we have
all stopped going to school because money is hard to come by,"
Mugoni said. "Since I cannot raise the money that is needed
for a major operation, I have resigned myself to watching my sister
die slowly."
After visiting the social
welfare department on several occasions to ask for help, Mugoni
realised her family's story was not unique: the underfunded department
had long waiting lists of needy people to tend to before it would
be their turn.
Josphat Mapanda, 45,
a teacher earning Z$14 million (US$10.77) a month, half of which
goes to pay his rent in Harare, said hospital officials had kept
his wife in detention for three weeks when she could not pay for
medical treatment she received after suffering a miscarriage.
He told IRIN he would
now have to avoid hospitals and visit a traditional healer if he
or a member of his family fell ill. "Drugs have been beyond
our reach for a long time, and I have seen many relatives and friends
die because of that, but it seems the recent rise in medical fees
is the final nail."
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