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Absent government puts burden of care on youth
PlusNews
October 20, 2008
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81006
For almost six
months now, John Mberi*, 14, from the high-density suburb of Mufakose
in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, has been taking care of his sick
mother, Fortunate, who returned home from neighbouring South Africa
very ill.
The community attributed
Fortunate's condition to food poisoning while awaiting deportation
in the infamous Lindela repatriation camp in South Africa, but close
family members knew that Fortunate was HIV positive.
Taking care of his ailing
mother has been very difficult for John, and he often misses school
when her condition is worse. On days like this he has to wash, cook,
clean and bathe his mother in bed using a bucket of water.
"On her return from
South Africa, my mother sent me to her only surviving brother, who
lives in rural Mutoko [about 200km outside Harare]. He refused to
come, saying we should relocate to the rural areas, but we had no
money to hire a vehicle to ferry our things," John told IRIN/PlusNews.
To ensure the family's
survival, he now sells roasted and salted groundnuts at a nearby
bar after school. Occasionally the family gets help from the local
United Methodist Church.
"Sometimes we can't
afford the medicines that are prescribed at the local clinic. The
drugs are cheap at the clinic but they normally don't have them
in stock, so they tell us to go and buy on our own. My mother worries
a lot but I have told her not to, because I will take care of her."
Palliative
care still not widely understood
It was World Hospice
and Palliative Care Day on 11 October but AIDS activists said in
Zimbabwe there was little to celebrate.
John's situation is becoming
increasingly common. As the HIV/AIDS pandemic takes it toll, many
young people are carrying the responsibility of caring of sick members
of the family, but are often unable to give them proper and adequate
care.
Activists argue that
the responsibility of caring for those with long-term or life-limiting
illnesses lies with the government, not young people like John.
According to
the Hospice and
Palliative Care Association of Zimbabwe (HOSPAZ), palliative
care is defined as the management of the many physical, psychosocial,
spiritual and emotional needs of people with progressive life-limiting
illnesses; it is not about "helping someone die" but about
"helping someone live as comfortably as possible with their
illness".
Rachel Zimunya from HOSPAZ
said palliative care was still not widely understood or implemented,
and not standardised although Zimbabwe was one of the first countries
in Africa to embrace the hospice and palliative care concept.
"Everyone living
with a life-limiting illness has the right to quality hospice and
palliative care to enable them to live with dignity and without
undue pain or distress," she said on the Partners Zimbabwe
website to raise awareness of the day.
"Lack of access
to pain and symptom relief can prevent people living with HIV and
AIDS, who may be experiencing painful and unpleasant side effects
from antiretroviral (ARV) treatments, from adhering to ARVs, with
the result that their life expectancy is curtailed. This breaches
the right to life."
Tinashe Mundawarara,
Programme Manager of the HIV/AIDS Human Rights and Law Project at
Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights (ZLHR), told IRIN/PlusNews: "The current
health system in Zimbabwe, which is a narrative of strikes, stock-outs,
expired drugs and a malfunctioning public health framework, is a
cause of consternation rather than celebration. More so, there is
no patient care and support system that includes the family in the
hospitals."
He said there was an
urgent need for reforming the laws on public health, educating people,
and putting in place palliative care programmes in all hospitals
as a matter of policy.
"People living with
HIV/AIDS need to speak with one voice on the advocacy issues of
access to treatment, drugs and care. Treatment, care and support
are the hallmarks of palliative care."
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