|
Back to Index
Health system in crisis
PlusNews
November 25, 2008
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81646
Stanley Takaona,
deputy president of the Zimbabwe HIV/AIDS Activist Union, has spent
the past month volunteering at two state hospitals in the capital,
Harare, after health workers began a work stoppage that has virtually
closed both facilities, leaving hundreds of people without medical
assistance.
Takaona, who is HIV positive
and a counsellor, told IRIN/PlusNews that thousands of HIV-positive
Zimbabweans regularly sought treatment and collected their antiretroviral
(ARV) drugs at the government-run clinics in the Parirenyatwa and
Harare hospitals, and he could not watch other HIV-positive people
suffering.
The health workers maintain
they cannot report for duty because the hospitals have become "death
traps" for patients: there are no drugs or medicines, and essential
and often life-saving equipment is badly in need of repair, or beyond
repair or outdated. The HIV clinics have no drugs to treat opportunistic
infections, no HIV test kits, and no blood sample kits.
They are also protesting
against poor remuneration and demanding that their salaries be paid
in foreign currency because of the unofficial dollarisation of the
economy.
Takaona told IRIN/PlusNews:
"As a person living with HIV myself, I know how important it
is to have these ... clinics open - that's why I have had to volunteer
my services and come out of retirement. I was particularly worried
that if those on ARVs couldn't access them, then we would have a
much bigger problem of drug resistance in the country."
Workers who have not
joined the strike have been so overwhelmed that they have been unable
to run the HIV treatment clinics, so Takaona and other members of
the HIV/AIDS Activist Union who are healthcare workers have stepped
in.
The volunteers are restricted
to dispensing ARV drugs because of the shortages of other drugs
to treat opportunistic infections. "HIV-positive people on
ARVs, and those not on any therapy, need to be constantly monitored
... If someone develops a rash or any side effects to the ARVs we
cannot treat them because there are no drugs," Takaona said.
"All we do is refer
them to the private sector, but not many people can afford the medical
care there because it is now very expensive - you are looking at
nothing less than US$300 for each consultation, blood tests, and
then buying whatever drugs are prescribed."
Kumbirai Mafunda,
communication officer at Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights, said the government was in denial.
"Government needs to come clean about its failures and declare
an emergency in the health sector, so that the donor community can
come in and assist," he suggested.
"But as long as
they continue to lie and tell people that these hospitals are open
when in actual fact we all know they closed, that aid will not come
and people will continue to die."
Last week hundreds of
nurses, doctors and support staff attempted a protest march against
poor salaries and deteriorating conditions in the health sector,
but were shocked to find riot police had cordoned off the whole
hospital, preventing them from going out to march.
Dr Douglas Gwatidzo,
Chairman of the Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights, said using the police
would not solve the problem facing the health sector.
"Zimbabwe's public
health system is in a state of collapse and in need of urgent action
to rescue it. Measures should be taken to provide adequate medical
supplies, drugs and equipment to Zimbabwe's hospitals and clinics,"
he urged.
"The government
must also guarantee quality for health professionals, and ensure
that conditions in which these skills can be retained are put in
place, including adequate remuneration and safe working conditions."
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
|