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No
joy for pregnant women during economic crisis
Miriam Madziwa
January 28, 2008
http://www.genderlinks.org.za/article.php?a_id=894
There is no
joy for pregnant Zimbabwean women during the economic crisis. Ordinarily,
falling pregnant should be a joyous experience for every woman.
And with just eight years
to go before the 2005 target for achieving the Millennium Development
Goals one would expect to hear accounts of how motherhood is increasingly
becoming a safer experience for women as countries strive to fulfill
the fifth development goal of "improving maternal health".
Sadly, this is not the
case for the majority of Zimbabwean women. Instead, with each passing
day, motherhood has become a nightmare best avoided.
The dilemma starts at
conception. For most Zimbabwean women the choice whether to fall
pregnant is not there. For a start, accessing contraceptives is
not easy.
Even the hard to find,
low-cost contraceptives are too expensive for most women.
Female condoms are not
readily available in supermarket and, again, are expensive. On the
other hand, male are cheaper and more widely accessible but, as
most women will point out, these are used only at the discretion
of the male partner. Therefore, women are falling pregnant against
their wishes.
Terminating an unplanned
pregnancy is out of the question. Abortion is illegal in Zimbabwe
except in cases of rape or where there is medical proof that carrying
the pregnancy to term poses a threat to the life of the mother.
All too often the responsibility
of antenatal care and bringing up the child rests entirely with
the woman.
The plight of
a Bulawayo woman who recently appeared in court on charges of illegally
terminating a pregnancy illustrates the magnitude of the dilemma.
Patience Matsetlo told
the court she terminated the pregnancy because she was "stressed"
because her monthly salary was not nearly enough to meet the hospital
bills and look after the unborn child.
The 26-year-old Matsetlo
said she was already struggling to look after a two-year-old child.
Her partner disappeared to South Africa soon after she conceived.
Even for those who plan
to start a family, accessing antenatal care is a challenge. Local
authorities offer the cheapest maternity services in urban areas.
But, even those are approving too expensive most women. As a result,
expectant mothers are foregoing antenatal care and praying they
do not have any complications when they go into labour.
Some women are turning
traditional midwives despite being aware of the inherent dangers
of doing so. Some of these women eventually end up in hospital.
Midwives often botch complicated deliveries, leaving the mother-to-be
with no option but to seek medical care to save both the baby and
their lives.
At some point, hospitals
were detaining mothers until they settled their bills. The "detentions"
stopped after women's groups protested. Hospitals have since
devised a subtle but more sinister way of pressing for payment;
withholding birth-record card.
This mode of debt collection
has far-reaching effects on the welfare of the child.
Without hospital birth
records, a child cannot be issued with a birth certificate and without
a birth certificate, a child cannot be enrolled in school, cannot
apply for a national identity . . . the list is endless.
A friend recently, recounted
how six months after giving birth she still has not received a birth
certificate for her daughter. She owes Mpilo Central Hospital Z$
1 500 000, enough for just one loaf of bread. My friend admits it's
a small amount and is fully aware of the implications, but she points
out, "there is always something that I need to buy urgently
for the baby, so I keep putting it off".
For the few that can
afford antenatal care, the quality of care is poor, as nurses and
doctors are few and overworked with limited resources. Towards the
end of last year Gweru City Council was forced to close one of its
maternity clinics citing lack of resources to pay staff. The clinic
reopened after a well-wisher living abroad offered to pay the nurses'
salaries for two years.
Giving birth is a nightmare.
Even while the woman is having labour pains, getting to hospital
is a problem because ambulances are often off the road because of
fuel shortages. Instead of concentrating on getting to hospital,
women in labour also have to think of where to get clean water before
they will be assisted. Water shortages mean that health institutions
often do not have running water and insist that patients, including
women in labour, bring their own buckets of water.
Another challenge that
Zimbabwean mothers-to-be are facing is purely economic - how
to clothe and feed their newborn babies? Queues are a common sight
in Zimbabwe these days. We queue for cash, water, milk, bread and
meat, almost everything. Like most items, disposable diapers are
in short supply and few shops still stock nappies.
It's still a surprise,
though, to see expectant mothers, hands in the small of their backs
and with protruding tummies, queuing outside a shop for nappies.
In Bulawayo, one shop that intermittently stocks nappies insist
on selling to "visibly pregnant mothers only". So individuals
wanting to help cash-strapped relatives and friends buy nappies
cannot do so. Desperate mothers are tearing up old T-shirts and
accepting old nappies from relatives and friends so that they can
raise their children.
Clearly, Zimbabwe's
health delivery system is failing to take care of pregnant women.
Women are dying from pregnancy-related complications because they
lack access to antenatal, delivery and post-natal care. Southern
Africa Aids Information Dissemination Service (SAFAIDS) official
Alice Mutema notes that women continue to die because "maternal
health is not being given the attention it deserves."
For women in Zimbabwe,
there is not much joy left in becoming pregnant. Though Zimbabweans
struggle to cope with the shortages with a brave face, when you
have a new life inside you, or are struggling through a difficult
labour, or trying to care for a precious newborn, it is all the
more difficult.
*Miriam
Madziwa is a freelance journalist based in Zimbabwe. This article
is part of the Gender Links Opinion and Commentary Service that
provides fresh views on everyday news.
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.
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