| |
Back to Index
Los
Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune examine effect of Zimbabwe's economic
crisis on access to antiretrovirals
Kaisernetwork.org
January
03, 2006
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=34513
The
Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune
recently published articles examining how the economic crisis in
Zimbabwe has affected HIV-positive individuals' access to antiretroviral
drugs. Summaries of the articles appear below.
- Chicago
Tribune: Access
to antiretroviral drugs for HIV-positive Zimbabweans has become
more restricted than ever because of inflation, a lack of foreign
currency to buy imported drugs and President Robert Mugabe's
urban evictions campaign, the Tribune reports.
According to the United Nations, hyperinflation in the last
three months has pushed the average cost of a month's supply
of antiretrovirals in Zimbabwe from $7.70 to at least $17, "a
fatal increase in a country where the average laborer earns
the equivalent of $20 a month," according to the Tribune
(Salopek, Chicago Tribune, 12/25/05).
- Los
Angeles Times: Zimbabwe's "economic collapse," including
hyperinflation and high unemployment, has led to the scarcity
of antiretrovirals and other medications, the Times
reports. According to Zimbabwean health officials, the country's
lack of foreign exchange has resulted in a shortage of antiretrovirals
because local manufacturers are unable to import necessary drug
components. Pervasive political and economic disorder over the
past few years and decreasing international donor funding means
that many Zimbabwean "doctors are wary of starting antiretroviral
programs unless they are sure the treatment will be sustained,"
the Times reports (Dixon, Los Angeles Times,
12/25/05).
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
|