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Urbanisation and the health of residents - Residents' voices
Bulawayo Proggressive Residents Association Agenda
April 09, 2010

This year the International World Health Day borders on the connection between health, population growth and urban existence. This theme is particularly relevant to the city as the population of Bulawayo has steadily outgrown the resources, infrastructure and capabilities of the city fathers as evidenced by the council's waiting list that stands at 90 000. The city's many health challenges related to water, environment, violence, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and their risk factors like tobacco use, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, harmful use of alcohol as well as the risks associated with disease outbreaks are one-way or another linked to the increased number of people immigrating into Bulawayo from surrounding areas. Rural-urban migration, fueled by the economic collapse of the past decade, the land resettlement exercise and political polarization, saw some citizens heading for Bulawayo in search of better living and working conditions. Even then, some fell victim to the ill-advised Operation Murambatsvina and lost their homes - shacks, huts and dura-walled rooms. As a result, the ability of central and local government to build essential infrastructures that make life in cities safe, rewarding, and healthy was compromised with evident consequences such as the 2008 cholera epidemic, the recent measles outbreak and the ever-present threat of HIV/AIDS.

Nowhere is the impact of urbanization on health more evident and dangerous than in the western suburbs where clinics and hospitals are too crowded, under-staffed and under-equipped to deal with the torrents of patients that stream in from the different townships of Bulawayo. The two hospitals, Mpilo Central Hospital and the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH), that were primarily built as referral hospitals to cater for the Matabeleland region are no longer of much assistance seeing as how they are burdened by the 195 000 households of Bulawayo.

Nowhere is the impact of urbanization on health more evident and dangerous than in the western suburbs where clinics and hospitals are too crowded, under-staffed and under-equipped to deal with the torrents of patients that stream in from the different townships of Bulawayo. The two hospitals, Mpilo Central Hospital and the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH), that were primarily built as referral hospitals to cater for the Matabeleland region are no longer of much assistance seeing as how they are burdened by the 195 000 households of Bulawayo.

Health outcomes are determined by environmental, social, and physical infrastructural conditions and factors that can be influenced by residents and other stakeholders. Examples of such determinants include water and sanitation, quality of air, living and working conditions, access to services and resources, among others. For instance, the city of Bulawayo's water crisis has reached alarming levels because the huge increase in people in the city was neither anticipated nor planned for. At the time Bulawayo's supply dams were commissioned to supply the city with water for domestic use, the planners had not anticipated all the industrial and domestic expansion that would later occur. While the residents of Bulawayo can walk tall because of the water treatment procedures that the city council undertakes, it has to be pointed out that with rationing in sight, the threat of unsafe water is on the horizon. This is so because the unreliability of piped drinking-water supplies in urban areas also encourages household storage of water. Some of the ways of storing water have high risks of contamination (diarrheal diseases) and vector breeding (dengue and malaria).

Minister Coltart to clarify issues

In response to calls from residents, over the on-going education crisis, BPRA has invited the Minister of Education, Sports, Art and Culture, David Coltart to address residents. Residents in Bulawayo have passed complaints about the state of the country's education system. It has seen teachers perpetually on strike, school development committees and parents at loggerheads while schoolchildren, like the proverbial grass when elephants fight, loafing around as if education had become extinct.

Minister Coltart is expected to explain the matter of teachers' incentives that has been the cause of wrangling between, not only parents and school authorities, but teachers themselves. The minister has previously defended the payment of incentives that are used to motivate teachers as they are underpaid by the government. However, one wonders what then his response will be after reports of clashes between parents and teachers that have become the order of the day in the city. The minister is also expected to justify or explain the unchanged examination fees that were announced recently. A number of schools failed to register candidates last year because parents were unable to pay the exam fees as they were too high. More importantly though, Minister Coltart will receive suggestions from residents and stakeholders to help him chart the way forward and solve issues bedeviling the country's education system.

The minister is set to address residents and other stakeholders on 17 April 2010 at the Large City Hall at 0900hrs. All residents are invited. This is a continuation of the service providers' consultative meetings that the association has been holding across the city. Like in other meetings, the purpose of this meeting is to provide a platform for residents to air their views and concerns.

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