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Inside
Zimbabwe's healthcare crisis
Scott
Baldauf, The Christian Science Monitor
May 30, 2008
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0530/p06s01-woaf.html
Lucia Munenzwa
was shell-shocked when she was presented with a list of items that
the local clinic needed for her to give birth at the health center.
Top of the list were
10 pairs of latex gloves to be used by the midwives. There were
also a surgical blade, clamp cord, cotton wool, linen saver, and
rehydration fluid. To buy all the requirements, Ms. Munenzwa, a
young widow who survives by selling items on the street, needed
about $20 billion Zimbabwean dollars (nearly US $40) - a figure
well beyond the reach of any ordinary Zimbabwean.
"The nurses have
just told me that without the items, they can't allow me to give
birth here," she said with tears in her eyes as she walked
out of the clinic, heading home. Two days later, Munenzwa gave birth
at home, with the assistance of an elderly neighbor. She named her
baby boy Lucky.
The collapse of Zimbabwe's
health sector, once the envy of many African countries, may seem
to be an internal matter - yet another sign of the country's
economic woes. But the flood of an estimated 3 million Zimbabwean
refugees from their country - fleeing as much for food and
medical care as for political freedom - has quickly spread
Zimbabwe's internal crisis to other countries. The ongoing anti-
immigrant violence in South Africa shows that Zimbabwe's problems
have regional repercussions, putting pressure on African leaders
to come up with solutions ... fast.
"What this shows
is that effectively there is no government in Zimbabwe," says
Chris Maroleng, a Zimbabwe expert at the Institute for Security
Studies in Tshwane, as Pretoria is now called. "It says to
us that in the end, we must have this issue of human security as
an essential starting point for solving the crisis. But the question
is how to get to the starting point. The international community
that normally intervenes in situations like this is unwelcome now
in Zimbabwe. So unless we resolve the underlying political problem,
we're going nowhere."
Signs of the healthcare
crisis have been obvious for some time to the few doctors still
available in the country's largest hospitals, Parirenyatwa and Harare
General Hospital.
At Parirenyatwa Hospital,
only 1 out of 18 dialysis machines works. At Harare General, only
3 out of 50 incubators works, and the neonatal unit is seriously
understaffed as nurses and doctors leave for more stable jobs abroad.
There is only one radiologist who is servicing Harare and Parirenyatwa
hospitals and the Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA). That radiologist
is "borrowed" from the Army.
Refrigerators in the
mortuary area at Harare General have stopped working.
Two weeks ago, surgeons
and anesthesiologists at Parirenyatwa stopped doing any operations
to protest the poor working conditions and inadequate supplies.
The surgeons say they are afraid of ruining their reputations by
continuing to lose patients by going into theater without adequate
supplies.
Douglas Gwatidzo,
chairman of the Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights, describes the situation
in Harare's health centers as "dire." "About one
doctor is serving over 8,000 people in the country, [compared with]
the world standard of 1 doctor to 500 patients," says Mr. Gwatidzo.
"It's quite sad."
Many mothers walk into
Harare Central Hospital's neonatal unit with little hope of taking
their infant children home alive. "I tell you those who come
out alive only do so by the grace of God," says Mary Moyo,
a young mother who had her child hospitalized in the unit last week.
In Zimbabwe's second-largest
city, Bulawayo, AIDS patients come to Thembelihle House for their
last hope of a dignified end. Thembelihle is a hospice designed
to provide terminally ill AIDS patients with enough food for them
to regain their strength so their families can look after them.
But the shortage of drugs
and medical supplies, the rising cost of food, and the growing poverty
of Zimbabwean citizens are making it a lot harder for Thembelihle
to do its job properly, says Gladys Dube, manager of the hospice.
She walks through the
wards, where 62 of the 70 beds remain empty because of staff shortages.
Women wash soiled sheets by hand. Used rubber gloves hang out on
clotheslines to dry.
"We have nothing
right now," says Ms. Dube. "We have a few candles in storage,
for when the power goes out. Soap at the moment is difficult to
find, so we are resorting to an entrepreneur who makes it himself,
but the quality is not good."
She takes the hand of
an emaciated young patient who has just checked in, and pats her
forehead. "Some come to us in a very bad state. We can improve
their nutrition so that they can go home to be looked after by their
families." Aid agencies used to bring food, but there has been
no food delivered here in the last month.
While doctors and even
members of parliament blame the government for the crisis -
Blessing Chebundo, chair of the parliamentary committee on health
and child welfare, says the government lacks political commitment
- the government itself says it is doing everything in its
power to address the health care crisis.
"We are aware of
the challenges in the health sector and we are doing everything
within our means to tackle them," says David Parirenyatwa,
the minister of health and child welfare. Parirenyatwa Hospital
was named after his father, the country's first black doctor.
Minister Parirenyatwa
blames the current crisis on economic sanctions against Zimbabwe,
placed by Britain and the United States for Zimbabwe's alleged
human rights violations. With little foreign currency, Zimbabwe
cannot purchase drugs on the global market. "The shortage
of foreign currency is a major impediment," he says.
*A journalist
who could not be named for security reasons contributed from Harare.
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