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Food voucher scheme benefits HIV-positive people
PlusNews
October 20, 2011
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=94024
Vulnerable people
living with HIV in Zimbabwe are benefiting from an electronic voucher
scheme being used to fight malnutrition among people on antiretroviral
(ARV) therapy and their families by providing them with nutritious
food.
The system,
introduced by the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and implemented
by the health ministry and NGOs, involves identifying malnourished
patients who are then given electronic vouchers to buy food at specific
shops.
The country's
economic collapse in the past decade has significantly strained
the ability of poor HIV-positive Zimbabweans to feed themselves
and their families when on ARVs. An estimated 570,000 Zimbabweans
are receiving the medication; HIV prevalence - one of the world's
highest - is 13 percent.
Prices remain
comparatively high for families with low incomes and little or no
access to US dollars, despite the improved availability of food.
The Zimbabwean dollar was discontinued in 2009 as a solution to
hyperinflation, and replaced by currencies such as the US dollar,
South African rand and Botswana pula, but unemployment levels are
extremely high and many people do not have access to these currencies.
Two months ago,
42-year-old John Mugove of Rugare, a low-income suburb about 8km
to the southwest of the capital Harare, collapsed while seeking
medical attention at an opportunistic infections (OI) centre and
had to be hospitalized for two weeks, leaving his four children
to fend for themselves.
Mugove had long
abandoned his small furniture-making business due to recurring illness,
and could barely raise money to cover basic family essentials such
as food and school fees. He has been looking after his children
alone after his wife ran away when he became critically ill and
tested HIV positive three years ago.
"Bringing
food home is such a big headache. Debt collectors are also demanding
the money that I owe the hospital," Mugove told IRIN/PlusNews.
"My worry
has not been to get nutritious food, but just any food that can
fill our stomachs. My last-born son, like me, has been diagnosed
HIV positive. He is malnourished and easily falls ill, partly because
the food I give him is of poor quality," he added.
Mugove recently
visited a clinic and was advised by the nurse to register for the
e-voucher food assistance programme at Harare Hospital near low-income
suburbs southwest of the capital.
The programme
supports about 5,000 patients and their families with essential
food items and is operating at seven health facilities in the capital
and has been extended to the second-largest city, Bulawayo.
Catholic
Relief Services (CRS) and Help from Germany (HfG) are the implementing
NGO partners working with the health ministry.
Patients on
ARVs or TB treatment who are malnourished are referred to register
with the scheme.
During registration,
adults' weight and height are measured to determine body mass
while children have their upper arm circumference measured to determine
if they are malnourished. Beneficiaries then have to answer questions
that help establish if their households are food insecure.
Patients are
given vouchers, in the form of scratch cards similar to mobile phone
airtime cards, which they take to designated retail outlets for
specific rations that are "good for one month and for a maximum
family size of five people", in addition to 10kg of corn soya
blend they receive at registration.
The rations
comprise maize-meal, beans and vegetable oil and beneficiaries receive
the food aid for six months but that period is extended if they
are still malnourished.
"A big
number of patients on ARVs come from poor and vulnerable households
that cannot afford nutritious food and this makes the e-voucher
system very essential," AIDS activist Martha Tholanah told
IRIN/PlusNews.
"But there
is a need to go beyond addressing current problems such as malnourishment
and ensure that patients receive help that enables them to sustain
themselves and their families through income-generating projects,"
she cautioned.
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