Divisions over efforts to fight malaria stall progress

KAROI — Ratidzai Moyo (33) of Chikangwe high density suburb is five months-pregnant and has suffered from the life threatening disease malaria twice within the last six months.

Moyo told NewsDay that she was a victim of a recurrence of the malaria scourge that gripped Chiedza suburb in the farming town three years ago.
She said there was a recurrence of malaria outbreak in Ward 10 while responsible authorities took long to curb it.

“As you can see, we have many water bodies around Chikangwe. We are victims of mosquitos around here,” she said.

Moyo is not the only one facing the malaria predicament here as many residents have complained of the disease.

Positive rate

When provincial Epidemiology Disease Control officer, Gift Masocha, visited Chiedza suburb during a testing campaign, out of 390 people tested, 190 were found positive to malaria infection.

The figure translated to a 48% positive rate that saw the establishment of health clubs to scale up awareness campaigns, as a critical intervention measure.

Ironically, health campaign have not yielded any positive results for many residents in Chikangwe and other suburbs in the farming town.

Population Services International partnered with Ministry of Health and Child Care for a 10-year advocacy campaigns in mainly malaria prone rural outskirts including Hurungwe district where mosquito nets were distributed freely.

In Chiedza the malaria control unit is religiously spraying anti-malaria pesticide where residents are “safe” from malaria.

Divide and rule

Zimbabweans commemorated World Malaria Day on April 25. Ward 3 councillor, Stewart Jena, complained of the “divide and rule” methods he said were used in dealing with malaria in Karoi by health officials.

This is the case around other places around Zimbabwe.

“We informed the council’s Environmental Health department and got assurances it will be solved but to no avail,” Jena said.

Sources revealed that mosquito nets distribution was done with the supervision of the environment health office.

Fatal

A malarial attack can turn fatal if there is no early intervention.

“We do not know why they are not acting, as nearly every rural clinic has mosquito nets outnumbering affected communities,” said a source who declined to be named.
A local doctor confirmed that uncomplicated malaria can turn fatal.

“It is not advisable that patients get the same medication after a few days or months of the same disease,” he said.

“There is need to react urgently on this medical crisis in Karoi town.”

But Masocha, the provincial Epidemiology Disease Control officer, begged to differ. He said Hurungwe was no longer badly affected after the rate significantly declined since 2016.

“We had 21 people per 1 000 affected by malaria in 2016, and 5 per 1 000 in 2017 while only 2 where affected this year,” Masocha said.

Hurungwe has four doctors and 88 nurses, 30 outlying clinics and three outlying hospitals with a catchment population of 410 181.

“We are ready if resources are timely availed and adequate consultations on the chemical of choice for IRS are done,” Masocha said.

Community Working Group on Health officer, Esther Sharara, said they were implementing health literacy programmes in Manicaland’s 35 districts where Nyanga, Chimanimani, Chipinge, Mutasa and Mutare are high burden districts.

“Malaria affects pregnant women as being pregnant lowers immunity resulting in many women passing on due to the disease,” she said.

“Stakeholders like Global Fund, USAID among others have mobilised funds to fight TB, Malaria and Aids as interventions in the communities in the country.”

Malaria is the third leading cause of illness and mortality in Zimbabwe, with 45 of the country’s 62 districts are malarial, with 33 categorised as high burden malaria areas. The 2002 malaria stratification estimates that about half the population is living in high-risk areas.

In its weekly surveillance report last week, the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare reported a total of 5 997 malaria cases and five deaths for the week ending March 5.
“This comes as deaths from malaria in Zimbabwe last year outstripped the 2016 figures amid indications that the number of people succumbing to the old age disease is still high. Zimbabwe recorded 518 deaths from malaria in 2017, compared with 231 for the whole of 2016 and 462 the previous year,” reads the report in part.

According to World Health Organisation 2018 theme ‘Ready to Beat Malaria’ but for many residents in Karoi, there is no winning for divided communities.

Key facts according to World Health Organisation WHO

  • Malaria is a life-threatening disease caused by parasites that are transmitted to people through the bites of infected female Anopheles mosquitoes. It is preventable and curable.
  • In 2016, there were an estimated 216 million cases of malaria in 91 countries, an increase of 5 million cases over 2015.
  • Malaria deaths reached 445 000 in 2016, a similar number (446 000) to 2015.
  • The WHO African region carries a disproportionately high share of the global malaria burden. In 2016, the region was home to 90% of malaria cases and 91% of malaria deaths.
  • Total funding for malaria control and elimination reached an estimated $2,7 billion in 2016.
  • Contributions from governments of endemic countries amounted to $800 million, representing 31% of funding.

Concern over delay of renal unit opening

The Community Working Group on Health (CWGH), a health delivery services pressure group, has expressed dismay over the continued failure to operationalise the renal unit at Masvingo General Hospital, saying the situation was making life difficult for kidney patients in the province.

Efforts to open the unit have stalled several times in the past few months amid allegations of red tape and bureaucratic bungling by officials at the provincial health referral centre.

CWGH provincial chairperson Mrs Entrance Takaidza last week called on the Ministry of Health and Child Care to ensure the unit is opened as a matter of urgency.

“As an organisation which stands for patients’ rights, we are perturbed by the delays in installing a renal unit at Masvingo General Hospital.

“This is happening at a time when the number of patients with kidney disease is increasing,” said Mrs Takaidza.
She said it was worrying that the Ministry of Health and Child Care has made several promises in the past over the opening of the renal unit at Masvingo General Hospital.

“We were told the machine (dialysis) was supposed to start working by end of last month, with some personnel having already been trained to operate it. However, a month down the line, nothing has happened and this is making life hard for patients in need of dialysis services.’’

Mrs Takaidza said kidney patients continue to fork out their hard-earned money to travel either to Harare or Bulawayo for dialysis services, yet the renal unit was lying idle at Masvingo General Hospital.

At Makurira Memorial Hospital, which is privately-owned, a dialysis session costs more than $150, while the average cost at Government-owned hospitals is about $60.

Masvingo provincial medical director Dr Amadeoas Shamu said opening of the renal unit was being hindered by outstanding minor works.

He admitted that its operationalisation was taking too long.

“The machine has been installed and personnel trained. However, we cannot start operating the machine now because there are minor works that need to be done before dialysis sessions begin,” said Dr Shamu.

The dialysis machine at Masvingo General Hospital was acquired from China under a government-to-government agreement in 2016, which benefited all major health referral institutions in the country’s 10 provinces.

Walter Mswazie Masvingo Correspondent

Public Health Act (Amendment) Bill: Community participation crucial

Itai Rusike Correspondent
The opportunity afforded to Zimbabweans to provide input into the supreme health law of the country is refreshing.
It is important to have communities come out and participate during the public hearings on the Public Health Act (Amendment) Bill to ensure that their views and perceptions have been incorporated into the final Bill and that it addresses community needs as enshrined in the nation’s Constitution.
Following a number of public health blunders that have seen resurgence of previously controlled diseases, unnecessary death, disability and suffering of Zimbabweans, it is imperative to have a shared vision and mission for public health across national stakeholders, including a shared understanding of the purposes and objectives of a public health law and the scope of public health action.
The role of communities should be to demand environmental, infrastructure and structural provisions to promote health for all in urban, rural, farming, mining and institutional spaces.
Zimbabweans must use this opportunity to ensure the development of a law that is not simply a means for controlling nuisances, but a tool for promotion of healthy conditions, for co-ordination of health activities and for improving the dialogue and relationships across public health authorities for the attainment of the country’s vision and mission for the health and well-being of its citizens.
In the developed world, health promotion is a high national priority that sits in the Prime Minister’s Office and ensures the provision of a healthy environment for all citizens and the attainment of health in its totality through targeted initiatives such as healthy cities, lifestyles, food etc.
Community concerns regarding gaps in the gazetted Public Health Act (Amendment) Bill
Community level mechanisms and functions
• Although Health Centre Committees (HCCs) have been legally recognised in Section 17, they are not represented in the District Health Team in Section 16 for feedback to and from the communities. Therefore, we strongly recommend that community involvement mechanisms need a representation mechanism in the district health team as the district government council in addition to the hospital management board, which oversees functionality of the district hospital.
• HCCs were fully captured. However the role of Village Health Workers (VHWs) and other community-based workers is not satisfactorily and explicitly stated in the act except for Section 137 sub-section 1(b) in a general statement that says “The minister may make regulations providing for: Recognising and providing for the roles of non-state actors and communities. Thus provisions for the VHWs could be detailed soon after Section 17 of HCCs.
• This is important because VHWs do not have an association or representation like other health cadres and yet they are the backbone of all community health programmes, hence the need for legal backing in order to be given priority. Include specific inclusion of the broad roles and functions of VHWs, including how they relate to other community-based workers (home-based carers, family planning distributors, OI/ART/Dots coordinators, school health coordinators, malaria spray operators etc)
• Section 28: The Bill is silent on the Health Centre staff establishment. It is therefore crucial to have a specific clause in the Bill that speaks to issues of the ideal healthcare establishment that looks realistically to the country attaining universal health coverage and the SDGs given that the current staff establishment was determined using the 1982 population statistics and when the disease burden was very low.
• Although it is covered in the Health Services Act, it should still reflect in the Public Health Act (Amendment) Bill so that the two are harmonised and be in tandem with the Constitutional provisions of leaving no one behind.
• Section 3: The Minister of Health and Child Care as a competent authority and the custodian of the Public Health Act should enforce the Act by demonstrating adequate powers supported with resources than has been the case under the current law.
The minister requires the legal muscle and needs teeth to bite so that perennial offenders of well-articulated and scientifically proven public health provisions, interventions and standards, such as the City of Harare, other local authorities and individuals can be brought to book and potential public health disasters averted before loss of life as has so far been the case and without fear or favour.
Itai Rusike is the executive director for the Community Working Group on Health

Health ministry bemoans poor budget

HARARE – The health sector’s $520 million 2018 budget allocation remains too low, despite Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa having increased it from $454 million, Health minister David Parirenyatwa said.
He said there was a lot of damage, wear and tear at the hospitals that needs to be fixed.
“Our target was $1,1 billion, it’s still not sufficient if you look at the number of repairs that are needed in our hospitals, just as an example.
“Before I touch medicines, if you look at how many laundry machines countrywide have broken down, the X-Ray machines that need to be replaced, the laboratory equipment that need to be addressed. Parirenyatwa said.
“We cannot replace all the laundry machines in all the hospitals in one year; we need to phase it and all that needs a big budget, so that budget to me is insufficient.”
Zimbabwe’s hospitals have been crippled by lack of medicines and equipment, which has in the past resulted in the suspension of some surgical operations at some major hospitals.
In trying to solve the situation, government introduced a health tax on airtime to boost revenue collection for drugs and equipment procurement, which according to Parirenyatwa has so far fetched $22 million.
Community Working Group on Health executive director Itai Rusike said the revised budget allocations were not adequate to meet a lot of challenges and that it still fell below “the Abuja Target of 15 percent of national budget that should be allocated to the health ministry.
“Access to allocated funds has also remained an issue in previous years as a result of limited flows of funds into the fiscus and other issues to do with absorption of funds.
“However, the need to prioritise the health sector when funds are disbursed from the fiscus has to be emphasised with the ministry of Finance,” he said.
“Civil society organisations have advocated for a pro-poor budget and a budget that promotes the principles of primary health care while moving towards the realisation of universal health coverage. We have also advocated for budget policies that reflects the country’s commitments to the international laws, norms and commitments such as the Right to Health, the Abuja Target and the Sustainable Development Goals.”

Condoms, sanitary wear debate rages on

Sheillah Mapani Features Writer
Every year, the Ministry of Health and Child Care (MOHCC) acquires condoms for free distribution to help fight the HIV and Aids pandemic. This has been hailed by stakeholders in the health sector as an important strategy to contain the spread of the disease.
However, other keen watchers have decried the absence of similar approaches to sanitary wear which thousands of girls school going age cannot access, especially in rural areas. Some critics suggest that the money being allocated to acquiring condoms be directed to sanitary wear as the latter serves an involuntary call of nature.
Debate on this contentious issue intensified in the past week after MDC Proportional Representation legislator Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga expressed her concerns in a debate which focused on the 2018 national budget saying she prefers the prioritisation of sanitary wear in the budget to condoms.
“On that point Mr Speaker,” she said, “why are we having condoms in the budget and not sanitary wear and yet for men who are over 40 years or 45 years, actually having an erection is almost like winning a lottery.
“It is very difficult for a man over 40 to have an erection. So, we have condoms that are actually not being used because most of these men cannot use them,” the legislator was quoted saying in her contribution which elicited mixed reactions.

Sanitary wear should be prioritised
Said Simon Chuma of Norton: “The MP stated that condoms are luxuries for men, which is wrong for everyone including teenagers use condoms. Though abstinence is being preached everyday it’s rarely practised. Condoms save lives.
“A number of school children born with HIV are sexually active and cannot afford to buy condoms on the market. Providing them with free condoms can help save their lives.”
Others say sanitary wear and condoms should all be provided for free. “Sanitary wear and condoms are both of importance so they should be prioritised,” said Leah Nyamhunga at a Glen View maternity clinic.
“Many couples are using condoms as a family planning method. It’s not true that they are not being utilised. It’s not a waste.”
Padare Men’s Forum on Gender activist Walter Vengesayi, supports the legislator’s position. “The honourable member was making a good point about universal access to sanitary wear. As Men’s Forum on Gender we support efforts towards making sanitary wear available for free,” he said.
“A lot of girls and women are being disadvantaged because they cannot afford them.” He also said free access to condoms and sanitary wear were important as far as sexual, reproductive health and rights were concerned.
“Our Government should prioritise both condoms and sanitary wear because one saves lives and the other improves the well-being of women,” the gender activist said. “So free access to both is important and nothing between the two should be looked down upon.”
Vengesayi disputed assertions on men’s erectile dysfunctions. “It is my humble opinion that one cannot generalise when it comes to erections. Some men have difficulties but the rest are fine so they use the condoms very well,” he said.
“It’s therefore important to say they should be available to those who need them, young and old.
“Condoms are not being wasted because those who cannot use them do not have any need for them but those who can are using them.”
Health experts say that despite the prioritisation of condoms being linked to sexual pleasure, they have multi-purposes.
“They are used by both men and women to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and as contraceptives for women and girls.
Executive director of Community Working Group on Health (CWGH), Itai Rusike said condoms became a priority in the national budget after 2002 when the government declared AIDS a national emergency. The AIDS Levy and National AIDS Trust Fund were established in 1999 as a unique tax based contribution to public spending.
“Zimbabwe has been among the highest countries affected by HIV in the region but levels have fallen post-2002 due to the free distribution of condoms,” said Rusike. “The country has successfully battled HIV and AIDS pandemic and registered a reduction in both incidence and prevalence through such innovative programmes on condoms and the Aids Levy.” He said the government had managed to the reduce prevalence rate through prioritisation of condom use from 21.5 percent to the current 14 percent.
“Therefore that is enough reason why condoms are being prioritised as lives are being saved,” Rusike said. Despite this, he however, said there was also need for the prioritisation of sanitary wear to enhance access for rural girls.
“Sanitary wear is generally available in most areas but very costly for most girls and women. They have resorted to using unhealthy means such as cow dung, maize stocks and pieces of cloth which can be washed and reused during the next cycle,” he said.
“So lack of proper sanitary products leads to infections which may lead to sexually health related complications.” The Government, he said, needed to include the sanitary wear in the national budget too, to enhance access.
Many people hailed the Misihairabwi’s motion advocating for free sanitary ware but still maintained that condom budgeting was not trivial.
“We applaud the motion that seeks advocate for free sanitary ware, however, comparing condom budgeting as trivial could be uncalled for given that our nation is yet to achieve our 90 percent goal to new HIV infections, as such condoms have been useful for both the age referred, the younger and even older generation,” said Ekenia Chifamba, a Friend of the Girl Child activist. “The absence of condoms could become regressive to the gains made thus far. Sanitary pads are a basic need for the girls and women as we cannot run away from the truth. This is a biological process.
“At the same time the same girls and women who we are advocating for free pads are the same individuals who are engaging in protected sex hence trivialising condom budgeting could be exposing the same girls to HIV infections in the absence of the condoms.” Chifamba said the removal of condoms from the national budget will be retrogressive in the fight against HIV and Aids.
“In maintaining a healthy nation that safeguards the health and well-being of women, condoms become essential to protect them from early pregnancies as well as sexually transmitted diseases,” the gender activist said.
“Removal of condoms could become injurious to the gains made in national development. Although sex is engaged in as a choice, menstruation is biological hence one cannot make a choice to or not to menstruate, both issues ought to be treated the same.”
Zimbabwe still faces challenges with the issue of availability and affordability of sanitary pads as two local companies face closure over lack of foreign currency to import raw materials.
Most of the inputs used in manufacturing sanitary pads are sourced from South Africa and China. Sanitary pads prices range from US$1 to US$10 depending on the type and quality.
The majority of poor rural girls and women cannot afford them. A 2014 National Spending Assessment (Nasa) report suggested that Zimbabwe uses at least $7 million on condoms annually, of which the bulk is donor funded.
In 2016, Zimbabwe distributed at least 110 million condoms countrywide, up from the 80 million distributed in 2014, Government statistics indicate. Condoms have become easier to access as they are given for free in most health institutions and public places. Zimbabwe is number 10 in terms of condom use in countries with generalised HIV epidemic. It distributes about 9 million condoms every month on average.
Top users include Armenia (1) followed by Swaziland, Nigeria, Ukraine, Belize, Mauritius, Gabon, Lesotho and Haiti. In 2016, Zimbabwe spent more than US$11 million to import sanitary wear products, showing a sharp decrease from $23 million in 2015. Duty was scrapped on sanitary wear after legislators piled pressure on the Government. And, while debate on condoms and sanitary wear rages on, it still remains to be seen how the Government will handle this contentious issue in its fiscus.