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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Health
in ruins: A man-made disaster in Zimbabwe
Physicians
for Human Rights
January 13, 2009
http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/library/report-2009-01-13.html
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Executive
summary
Introduction
and overview
Physicians for Human
Rights sent an emergency delegation to Zimbabwe in December 2008
to investigate the collapse of healthcare. The health and nutritional
status of Zimbabwe's people has acutely worsened this past
year due to a cholera epidemic, high maternal mortality, malnutrition,
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and anthrax. The 2008 cholera epidemic that
continues in 2009 is an outcome of the health systems collapse,
and of the failure of the state to maintain safe water and sanitation.
This disaster is man-made, was likely preventable, and has become
a regional issue since the spread of cholera to neighbor states.
The health crisis
in Zimbabwe is a direct outcome of the violation of a number of
human rights, including the right to participate in government and
in free elections and the right to a standard of living adequate
for one's health and well being, including food, medical care, and
necessary social services. Robert Mugabe's ZANU PF regime continues
to violate Zimbabweans' civil, political, economic, social, and
cultural rights.
The collapse
of Zimbabwe's health system in 2008 is unprecedented in scale and
scope. Public-sector hospitals have been shuttered since November
2008. While some facilities remain open in the private sector, these
are operating on a US-dollar system and are charging fees ranging
from $200 USD in cash for a consultation, $500 USD for an in-patient
bed, and $3,000 USD for a Cesarean section. With fees in reach for
only the wealthy, the majority are being denied access to health
care.
International
human rights framework Zimbabwe is a party to the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR or the
Covenant), the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women (CEDAW), and the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights.
The Government has a legally binding obligation to respect, protect,
and fulfill these rights for all people within its jurisdiction.
The right to health imposes
core obligations, which require access to health facilities on a
non discriminatory basis, the provision of a minimum essential package
of health-related services and facilities, including essential food,
basic sanitation and adequate water, essential medicines, and sexual
and reproductive health services, including obstetric care. Even
with limited resources, the Government is required to give first
priority to the most basic health needs of the population and to
the most vulnerable sections of the population.
Methods
for this investigation
During a seven-day
investigation to Zimbabwe (13-20 December 2008) conducted by four
human rights investigators, including two physicians with expertise
in public health and epidemiology, PHR interviewed and met with
92 participants, including healthcare workers in private and public
hospitals and clinics, medical students from both of the medical
schools in Zimbabwe, representatives from local and international
NGOs, representatives from U.N. agencies, Zimbabwean government
health officials, members of parliament, water and sanitation engineers,
farmers, and school teachers. The PHR team visited four of the ten
provinces in Zimbabwe, in both urban and rural areas. Provinces
visited included Harare, Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland West,
and Mashonaland East.
Findings
The economic collapse
A causal chain
runs from Mugabe's economic policies, to Zimbabwe's economic collapse,
food insecurity and malnutrition, and the current outbreaks of infectious
disease. These policies include the land seizures of 2000, a failed
monetary policy and currency devaluations, and a cap on bank withdrawals.
Mugabe's land seizures destroyed Zimbabwe's agricultural sector,
which provided 45% of the country's foreign exchange revenue and
livelihood for more than 70% of the population. Hyperinflation has
ensued while salary levels have not kept pace. A government physician
in Harare showed PHR her official pay stub; her monthly gross income
in November 2008 was worth 32 U.S. cents ($0.32 USD). The unemployment
rate is over 80%. Low-income households have had to reduce the quantity
and quality of food. The Mugabe ZANU-PF government must be held
accountable for the violation of the right to be free from hunger.
Public
health system collapse
The Government of Zimbabwe has abrogated the most basic state functions
in protecting the health of the population, including the maintenance
of public hospitals and clinics and the support for the health workers
required to maintain the public health system. These services have
been in decline since 2006, but the deterioration of both public
health and clinical care has dramatically accelerated since August
2008.
Healthcare
and healthcare delivery
As of December
2008, there were no functioning critical care beds in the public
sector in Zimbabwe. The director of a mission hospital told PHR:
"We see
women with eclampsia who have been seizing for 12 hours. There is
no intensive care unit here, and now there is no intensive care
in Harare. If we had intensive care, we know it would be immediately
full of critically ill patients. As it is, they just die."
Life expectancy
at birth has fallen dramatically from 62 years for both sexes in
1990 to 36 years in 2006; 34 years for males and 37 years for females,
the world's lowest.
Limits
to access: affordability, transportation, closures
Since the dollarization
of the economy in November 2008, only a tiny elite with substantial
foreign currency holdings have any real access to healthcare. Transport
costs, even within Harare, have made getting to work impossible
for many healthcare employees. A rural clinic staff nurse reported
that since he lived at the clinic, he had no difficulties in getting
to work; however, since bus fare to get to the nearest town to collect
his monthly salary cost more than the entire salary, it made no
sense to collect it. He had not done so since April 2008. A senior
government official said: Government salaries are simply rotting
in the bank. When asked about how the absence of healthcare workers
was affecting HIV treatment, the official said: This is not a strike.
The problem is the staff and the patients cannot come due to travel
costs.
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