Health Centre Committees (HCCs) as a vehicle for social participation in health in East and Southern Africa

Health Centre Committees (HCCs) as a vehicle for social participation in health in East and Southern Africa

The programme seeks to capacitate Health Centre Committees (HCCs) by strengthening advocacy, laws and approaches on a regional level. Encompassed in the overall goal of the programme is the principle that HCC roles should be clearly located within national health system processes.
As the lead organisation on the programme, CWGH is working in partnership with the Training and Research Support Centre (TARSC) on photovoice and information sharing; University of Cape Town (UCT) School of Public Health on training programmes; and the Lusaka District Health Management Team (LDHMT) on legal provisions.
Work in Kenya, Zambia, Malawi, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe also focuses on advocating for policy and legal recognition of HCCs, giving visibility to their roles as well as identifying and strengthening the different capacities that committees and the health systems need for HCCs to implement these roles. This includes areas such as tracking and monitoring health system budgets and resources and their use and health system performance as well as building social dialogue and accountability.
As part of the work, UCT in South Africa is building a database of information on the current training materials and training programmes for HCCs to enable us to share materials, skills and experiences on capacity building in the region, and to advocate for HCC training that addresses their roles comprehensively. and their coverage of the key areas of functioning. LDHMT in Zambia has initiated an in-country process to review the laws and regulations that provide for the establishment and functioning of HCCs, and to document the Zambia experience for wider regional exchange. In Zimbabwe, the CWGH has supported the HCCs to engage with government, so that HCC members can speak out about their concerns on the health system and on the support they need to successfully implement their roles. Training on community photography by TARSC means that the members have visual tools as well as words to raise evidence on their problems and progress.
Social participation in health systems has been a consistent element of post-independence health policies in East and Southern Africa (ESA) countries and central to Primary Health Care (PHC) approaches that meet the health needs of target populations. A 2007 Regional Equity analysis done by the Regional Network for Equity in Health in East and southern Africa (EQUINET) highlighted that social participation and power are key for equitable health systems and for reclaiming and using resources for health. The report noted that regionally access to health care varies across countries, groups and individuals, largely influenced by social and economic conditions as well as health policies.

Strengthening Community Participation in Health (SCPH)

Strengthening Community Participation in Health (SCPH)

Zimbabwe’s maternal death rate dropped by 36% since 2009, but despite the progress over the past 5 years, it remains one of the highest in the world at 525 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births and 86 child deaths per 1000 live births. It is against this background that CWGH in partnership with Save the Children are implementing a 3 year project on Strengthening Community Participation in Health (SCPH) project. The project is in 21 districts across eight provinces in Zimbabwe, with support from DFID and EC.
The SCPH project aims to strengthen community engagement in health planning and service provision, with special emphasis on improving Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) services. Through revitalizing Health Centre Committees (HCC’s) and strengthening community feedback mechanisms, the project has already achieved a positive impact on the quality and outcomes of MNCH services in the select provinces.  The project’s key activities also contribute to national level advocacy to meet Results Based Financing (RBF) targets for MNCH in Zimbabwe.
Beneficiaries of the project include; directly and indirectly; pregnant women, children under 5 years, HCCs/Community Monitors (CMs), Village Health Workers (VWHs)/Health Literacy Facilitators (HLFs), Health Workers and the general community through layered advocacy efforts which depend on issues coming out from the communities. The community level cadres have received comprehensive training to effectively use the set-up community feedback mechanism.
The project is rooted in the Theory of Change which targets notable improvements in the delivery of MNCH services in Zimbabwe through the achievement of four key results that follow a logical cycle:
    Result 1 will seek to raise the awareness of local communities to their rights and entitlement to health care. This result incorporates a strong communications focus and seeks to raise community knowledge and understanding of their rights and to initiate a culture of challenge to the status quo, rather than acceptance of poor standards and bad practices.
    Result 2 focuses on building the demand amongst communities for greater accountability through stronger and greater numbers of CHCs, use of community score cards and feedback mechanisms.
    Result 3 will build on this community capacity to engage with health providers and duty bearers to use feedback mechanisms and engage them in a partnership for change.
    Result 4 will use the data and information collected from the community level to inform and change institutional behaviors and policy decisions at the district and national levels.  

Get your priorities right, govt told

Get your priorities right, govt told

get_prioritiesHealth stakeholders have called on the government to get its priorities right by improving budget allocations towards the health sector, embarking on private public partnerships and plugging leakages within the sector.
The experts said if the government sets its priorities right, citizens’ access to facilities would be improved, thus ensuring quality health service delivery.

The Zimbabwe Medical Association (ZIMA) President, Dr Agnes Mahomva said private public partnerships should be taken seriously as they have been successfully implemented in other countries with better results.
“Government has for some time now misplaced its priorities regarding the provision of health facilities and services. Even workers need to be looked after,” she said.

Zimbabwe has failed to allocate the health sector the 15 percent requirement as espoused by the Abuja Declaration, with the sector getting an average 7 percent.

Community Working Group on Health Executive Director, Mr Itai Rusike said budget allocations to health should be increased.

Health and Child Care Parliamentary Portfolio Committee Chairperson, Dr Ruth Labode believes fraud and mismanagement of funds, wrong and misplaced priorities and leakages could be bleeding the sector.

The constitution of Zimbabwe guarantees the rights to health in Chapter 4 sections 76 and 77 where it states that every citizen and permanent resident of Zimbabwe has the right to have access to basic health-care services.

Every person living with a chronic illness has the right to have access to basic healthcare services for the illness according to the constitution.

 

Monday, 15 February 2016

‘Health board should lobby govt’

'Health board should lobby govt'

HARARE - The Health Services Board (HSB) should convince government of the importance of care workers and ensure that they are fully capacitated, the Community Working Group (CWG) on Health has said.
In an interview with the Daily News last week, CWG’s executive director Itai Rusike said HSB’s impact should be felt when they lobby government.
Minister of Health David Parirenyatwa revealed in Bulawayo recently that an estimated 3 500 nurses were unemployed.
He also noted that with the revised staff establishment, government would absorb all the unemployed nurses with room to employ an additional 5 000.
While world over standard nurse to patient ratio is 1 to 4, in Zimbabwe it is 1:15.
“The recent statistics show a worsening rather than improvement of some key health indicators that directly relate to population health and avoidance of preventable deaths,” he said.
Rusike added that the growth in population and disease burden should necessitate an increase in health workers so as to provide sufficient and quality services.
He said in some instances nurses cannot
undergo further training as their stations will be left empty due to a shortage of staff.
“However, even with the establishment levels, government is still unable to fill in the current establishment. For example most district hospitals do not have four doctors as required in the current establishment system,” Rusike said.
Zimbabwe Nurses Association has said that since most nurses have been unemployed for long periods of time, they need to go for refresher courses.

Helen Kadirire • 16 May 2016

Donor fatigue threatens health sector

Donor fatigue threatens health sector

April 2, 2016 Stan Chiwanga Opinion & Analysis

 

By Tabitha Mutenga, Features and Supplements Editor

David-Parirenyatwa-300x219
Minister of Health David Parirenyatwa

 

THE deepening economic crisis has paralysed the country’s public health sector that had become heavily dependent on donor funding.
Donor assistance, which had, over the years, become the backbone of the country’s health sector, has been drying up as a result of a global recession.
Over the years, Zimbabwe has failed to adequately fund its health sector, leaving external donors to fill the gap.
Instead of setting aside at least 15 percent of its national budget towards healthcare in line with the Abuja Declaration, Zimbabwe has consistently failed to do so for the past 14 years.
Instead, the country has abdicated this responsibility to donors.
Government’s 2015 National Budget amounting to US$4,1 billion allocated US$300 million towards the health sector.
Out of the US$300 million, US$177 million was for employment costs, US$53 million for operations and a paltry US$28 million for capital expenditure.
In the absence of donor funding, the public health system faces collapse since the majority of the country’s key health programmes were dependent on it.
Since 2003, Zimbabwe has been receiving assistance from the Global Fund to fight HIV and Aids, tuberculosis and malaria.
Unfortunately, the programme is expected to end next year.
A donor-driven US$435 million Health Transition Fund, which has transformed the face of the health sector since 2009, is also expected to come to an end in December.
What’s next after donor funding is the biggest question in everyone’s mind?
Countries that have been known to depend on donor funding have almost fallen into absolute poverty after their good Samaritans pulled the plug.
Zimbabwe might find itself in a similar situation.
Ideally, government should fund the majority of its health-related activities with partners bridging the gap.
With the majority of Zimbabweans now failing to afford basic health care services, at a time Treasury is financially crippled to subsidise services, it is high time government comes up with concrete plans to rescue the health delivery system.
Development specialist, Maxwell Saungweme, said Zimbabwe is now a charity case.
“We are indeed a charity case as most of our people cannot afford basics such as health care, education, food and so on. It is a very sad situation arising from bad governance which has seen the collapse of the medical sector and, in particular, reducing us to dependency on drug donations yet we used to produce most of the drugs we needed ourselves.
“The desperate situation with medical funding and drugs is reflective of all other sectors and facets of Zimbabwean life mainly due to bad governance and poor policies over the years,” he said.
Already most district and provincial hospitals are operating below 60 percent because of a shortage of drugs.
Low budget disbursements have also impacted negatively on the operations of major referral hospitals in the country.
Rising debts, outdated equipment, poor funding and maladministration have crippled the operations of hospitals.
For over a decade now, government has failed to provide an efficient and effective basic health care system.
A myriad of factors caused by poor governance and a collapsing economy have manifested themselves in the flight of qualified health practitioners, poor remuneration, insufficient funds for the Ministry to run health programmes, lack of drugs in health institutions and unaffordable health care.
Community Working Group on Health director, Itai Rusike, said it was unfortunate that the bulk of the funding was coming from donors.
“While government policies on essential drugs and on equity in health have significantly widened treatment access in Zimbabwe, there is evidence that drug access has fallen in recent years, and that drug availability is falling, most sharply at the clinic services that form the frontline of the health care system with the community.
“This represents an unfair cost burden on poor communities, but also opens the way for growth of private unregulated drug markets. Drug supplies at rural health centre level are also problematic and are a constant source of client discontent. The approximate 1 000 clinics in Zimbabwe are the last step in a long chain of drug procurement and distribution. Drug supplies that exist at national level are reported to take up to six months to be delivered to district and clinic level,” Rusike said.
Communities have had to spend scarce resources on security services to guard clinics from recurrent theft of drugs and other supplies, given that some of the facilities have no fencing, burglar bars or other forms of security.
“The cost of medications has increased significantly and medical costs have been the highest rising element of the Consumer Price Index for some time,” he added.
newsdesk@fingaz.co.zw

Coping with pregnancy when disabled

Coping with pregnancy when disabled

mapisi

Thandeka Moyo
WHILE motherhood is often celebrated as a positive experience universally, Musa Sibanda, a woman from Bulawayo, was far from being happy on the day she gave birth to her first child.

The woman cut a lonely figure in the maternity ward at Mpilo Central Hospital while other new mothers welcomed their newborn babies with smiles and chuckles.

She had one wish — that the little life in her hands should just die.

Sibanda, who has a speech and hearing impairment, regarded her life as some form of “punishment” from God for nothing seemed to be alright.

Besides her disability, she had tested HIV-positive four years earlier. Wrongly, Sibanda assumed she had transmitted the virus to her baby and was convinced the baby would not make it.

She had flashbacks of the day she took the HIV test and how the post-test counsellor struggled, using rudimentary sign language, to give her tips and advice on living a healthy life despite her HIV status.

The test result was written on a slip for Sibanda to read.

It appeared the counsellor said a lot judging from the movement of her lips complemented, in vain, with hand gestures. But it was the written “message” on the slip that Sibanda finally understood after a lengthy counselling session.

“I was convinced my newborn child was HIV positive since I was also positive,” Sibanda said. “When nurses discharged me, I left Mpilo Central Hospital maternity ward prepared to spend a few years with the little one, suspecting she would die before reaching five.”

Whenever the baby fell sick, Sibanda prepared herself for the worst.

A brave decision to ask a friend who could communicate in sign language to accompany her to the hospital with her daughter paid off.

“After a traumatic four years, I learnt that my daughter was HIV negative,” Sibanda said.

“That day, I learnt of a new concept: the Prevention of Mother To Child Transmission (PMTCT). I was told it was the reason why my child was negative though I was HIV positive.”

While Sibanda’s baby is a healthy normal child, Sibanda had to live for years haunted by the heart-wrenching assumption that her baby was born with the virus. The mother had to wait for years to draw joy from her daughter’s birth.

The good news, it appears, was lost in translation.

With no working knowledge of sign language, staff at the hospital battled to convey the correct message to her at the time of the child’s birth.

Language and communication barriers hinder people with hearing and speech impairment (PWD) especially women who often find themselves stranded when trying to access antenatal care (ANC).

The World Health Organisation (WHO) says the majority of health problems leading to maternal deaths can be prevented, detected and treated by trained health workers during antenatal care visits.

Zimbabwean health workers and professionals are trained in everything else necessary to give quality ANC except Sign Language although the constitution recognises it as one of the country’s official languages.

Chapter 1 subsection 6 (4) of the constitution stipulates that the State must promote and advance the use of all languages used in Zimbabwe, including sign language, and must create conditions for the development of the languages.

“Sign Language is official only on paper. I’ve never come across a nurse who can easily communicate with me. I relied on reading lips during my ANC visits and I know I missed out on a lot of crucial information as the nurses were educating us on safe sex, HIV and Aids, diet, exercise among other topics.

“The reason our health practitioners don’t use Sign Language is the attitude that our government has on PWD. Millions have been used to research on condom use, elections and everything but to date our government hasn’t given us the correct figure of PWD, thus we are as good as non-existent in Zimbabwe,” says Chiedza Phiri from Bulawayo’s Nguboyenja suburb with the assistance of an interpreter.

Bulawayo High Court Judge, Justice Maxwell Takuva, recently ordered the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (Zimstat) and the Minister of Finance and Economic Development, Cde Patrick Chinamasa, to release funds to facilitate the full participation of people with disabilities in future population censuses.

Takuva’s judgement followed an application by the Zimbabwe National League for the Blind (ZNLB) suing Zimstat, Minister Chinamasa and his Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare counterpart, Cde Prisca Mupfumira, for allegedly deliberately excluding its members from participating in the 2012 census programme.

Irene Moyo, a wheelchair-bound paraplegic living with HIV, said while her peers suffer due to communication, she experienced discrimination from health workers who seemed to suggest that she should not have children due to her physical disability and HIV status.

“I don’t have a hearing and speech impairment but I met the most discriminatory experience at Mpilo Hospital because of my physical disability. Delivering my third child brought me a lot of trauma,” said Moyo.

Moyo remembers being surrounded by a group of inquisitive and curious midwives who took turns to interrogate her while giving her questioning looks as she sat in her wheelchair.

“I felt like I had committed a sin by falling pregnant while disabled. It was as if PWD have no sexual organs,” Moyo said. “I simply told the nurses that I deserved privacy and that they weren’t special as we were all subjected to the same risks. They slowly walked away accusing me of ingratitude. A disabled pregnant woman is supposed to open up on her sex life in the presence of about 12 nurses and allow them to scrutinize her.”

Moyo says she made up her mind to fight for her rights from that day.

“Up to today I can’t take any discrimination from health personnel who want to dramatise my condition to entertain themselves,” she says.

Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) director, Itai Rusike, says Zimbabwe requires effective communication tools as it moves towards universal healthcare provision.

“Health must have a universal communication strategy so certain sections of our communities aren’t short-changed. We need to closely review our training curriculum and consider the use of sign language, Braille and other languages which are officialised by the Constitution. We need to appreciate the realisation of the right to health enshrined in the constitution. The attitudes we find in hospitals and low morale among practitioners is also a result of poor health financing and prioritisation,” said Rusike.

Dr Bernard Madzima, the director for family health in the Ministry of Health and Child Care, acknowledged the absence of a specific communication strategy for disabled women.

“However, all communication strategies from the Ministry are inclusive as you’ll appreciate that disabilities are wide. Again there’s no discrimination in service provision. However, those with specific needs are accommodated especially those who are difficult to reach because of the nature of the disability.

“Issues of stigma and discrimination can happen. However, the ministry has a programme of training health workers in Disability Awareness aimed at reducing stigma and discrimination.”

Disability HIV & AIDS Trust (DHAT) head of operations Hamida Ismail says women and girls with hearing and speech impairments miss out on information on maternal health due to the communication barrier and low literacy levels.

“While it’s important to train health practitioners on sign language, there’s a need to ensure the sustenance of the language. It’s crucial to understand that sign language is a language, hence the need to practice it on a regular basis after the training,” she said.

Ismail says failing to provide appropriate information perpetuates maternal mortality among women and girls living with disabilities.

April 2, 2016 Stan Chiwanga Opinion & Analysis

Birth shelters reduce broken hearts

Birth shelters reduce broken hearts

Pregnant women at Kanyaga clinic
Pregnant women at Kanyaga clinic

Paidamoyo Chipunza Senior Health Reporter
Tucked away in the thick forests of Makonde district lies Kanyaga village. Apart from agricultural, mining and other social activities that make up the daily routine of an adult man and woman in Makonde, sex and sexuality completes their diary.

At some point, clinics capable of assisting pregnant women to deliver in the event that they decided to get pregnant were limited and scattered.

The few clinics that existed had no shelter to accommodate pregnant women who stayed far away for them to get medical assistance as soon as they started showing signs of labour.

Some women had to travel as long as 30 kilometres to the nearest clinic leaving them with no option but to give birth at homes or along the way as they failed to make it on time to the clinic – a situation that could result in the deaths of both the mother and the newly born child.

Thirty-two-year old Stancia Makochekerwa is one of the strong women of Makonde who lost four babies – all of whom were delivered at home – but can still afford to put on a smile with her fifth pregnancy as she waits patiently to give birth at Kanyaga clinic.

Ms Makochekerwa said on the first and second occasions, she was assisted by a traditional birth attendant and by her mother respectively but sadly both children died within 48 hours of birth.

She said her third pregnancy was a stillbirth, which was also handled by her mother at home while the fourth child died at the age of two years.

The child was also delivered from home and did not receive medical intervention.

She said the child looked sickly from birth and had stunted growth that resulted in his death two years on.

“Then Kanyaga clinic was not there and we would go to Kenzamba clinic, which is far away from our village. Kenzamba did not have a mother’s waiting shelter and women would only go there when they started showing signs of labour,” said Ms Makochekerwa.

She said her other option was to go to Chinhoyi Hospital, about 70 kilometres away but she would still require money for transport and other associated costs.

“I did not have that money to go to Chinhoyi Hospital and after weighing my options I decided to give birth at home with the assistance of a traditional birth attendant,” she said.

Traditional birth attendants are usually paid with a goat, soap, 20kg mealie-meal and hens.

“It pained me as I kept on losing my children one after the other. I was only relieved when I heard that Kanyaga homestead would be turned into a clinic and that a temporary room had been set aside for pregnant women to live in as their day got closer,” she said.

Ms Makochekerwa said she did not think twice when she carried her fifth pregnancy but rushed not only to register it, but also to join 13 other expecting mothers waiting for delivery at Kanyaga clinic.

Although conditions at the shelter were appalling with all the expecting women and two others who gave birth sharing a small tobacco ban with little ventilation and space, all the women concurred that the room was a better alternative as they awaited completion of a proper shelter currently under construction.

The house is being constructed by the community through Kanyaga health centre committee and the district development committee.

Ms Alice Mutendagayi (30) from Katsvamutimu in Murombedzi also testified to the importance of mother’s waiting shelters saying if the homes had been there long ago she would not have lost her child.

Ms Mutendagayi said unlike her other pregnancies, she did not show signs of labour early.

“It was a Tuesday afternoon when I was working in the garden with my other children. From nowhere and with no pain or any discomfort, I broke my waters and I knew it was time,” she recalled.

“I quickly packed my bags and sat foot on the road for Madzorera clinic together with my aunt but before we went any further, the baby was on her way,” she said.

Ms Mutendagayi said her aunt helped her deliver but still they proceeded to Madzorera clinic in a scotch cart with the umbilical code still tied to baby.

Sadly, the baby failed to make it; she was pronounced dead upon arrival at the clinic.

“Then, there was no waiting home at Madzorera clinic but this time around I came early before my expected delivery date so that when it happens, those trained to do the work can take care of me and my child,” she said.

A former traditional birth attendant from Zumbara in Makonde who is now working with the Zumbara health centre committee to educate and encourage villagers on the importance of delivering in health facilities said institutional deliveries served to reduce the number of women and children who died during child birth.

Ms Rumbidzai Kapunga, popularly known as Madzimai Jennifer in her apostolic circles, said she saw light when she fall pregnant and could not assist herself to deliver forcing her to seek medical attention from a health facility.

Although she made it on time to Zumbara clinic at the onset of labour, Madzimai Jennifer said her delivery was marked by complications ranging from the child tying himself with the umbilical code to mucus blocking his nasal passage making it difficult for him to breath.

“I remember vividly sekuru (Petros) Spanera (a nurse at the clinic) getting a little instrument which he used to draw the mucus from my child’s nasal passage. I said to myself, what if it was a client’s child, how could I have handled these complications with no medical equipment at home? The child could have died,” she said.

She has joined the Zumbara health committee as a community monitor.

“We work with communities educating and encouraging them to register pregnancies early and visiting health facilities as soon as they start showing signs of labour. We also encourage those who stay far away from the clinics to consider staying at the clinic’s mother’s waiting shelter so that they do not delay in getting assistance as soon as they get into labour,” she said.

She said the response had been overwhelming as statistics from the clinic showed an upward increase in the number of woman delivering at the clinic per month versus home deliveries.

Zimbabwe’s maternal mortality rate currently stands at 610 per every hundred thousand live births.

Although on a decline, the figure is arguably still one of the highest on the continent with most deaths attributed to home deliveries as villagers lack both skill and scope to assist with deliveries.

Some deaths have also been attributed to delays in reaching a health facility to get skilled attendance.

Complicated deliveries can lead to the death of either the mother or the newly born baby.

This prompted Government to partner with the Community Working Group on Health and Save the Children to conscience communities on what they can do for their health facilities through a programme called strengthening community participation in health.

Through the project, most communities have mobilised resources for developmental projects at their clinics such as construction of waiting mother’s shelters, clinic refurbishments and have assisted in procurement of drugs and other necessities.

The communities have also identified influential people trained to promote health seeking behaviour among villagers particularly regarding maternal and child health.

March 10, 2016 Shingirai Huni Features, Opinion & Analysis

 

‘Poor service delivery drives typhoid’

‘Poor service delivery drives typhoid’

HARARE - Poor service delivery is the key driver of the typhoid outbreak in Harare, city director of health Prosper Chonzi has said.

According to health committee minutes, Chonzi said since January 22, there had been 101 suspected cases, 13 confirmed and no deaths from the disease.

Chonzi said the water and sanitation situation in the city was causing typhoid to resurface after the 2011 outbreak that hit Dzivarasekwa.

In October 2011, the outbreak spread to other suburbs such as Warren Park, Kuwadzana,

Mufakose, Mabelreign and Granary, with 1 175 treated cases.

Contaminated shallow wells were identified as the probable cause due to poor water and sanitation hygiene during the outbreak.

Since the beginning of the year, Harare City Council (HCC) has been having fortnightly water cuts as it conducts repair and maintenance works at Morton Jaffray waterworks and the city’s distribution network.

The city is grappling with poor water distribution in areas such as Greendale, Glen Lorne, Mandara, Mabvuku, Tafara and Budiriro.

“The key drivers are inadequate potable water supply and residents resorting to unsafe water sources like unprotected wells and poor sanitation caused by erratic refuse collection and management resulting in the proliferation of illegal and indiscriminate dumpsites,” Chonzi said.

He added that other causes also included burst sewer pipes, their delayed repairs and sewer outflows into residential areas.

Other drivers of typhoid in Harare also included use of unhygienic sanitation means, like pit latrines in new settlements and emergence of illegal vending and selling of raw fish, meat and sadza under unhygienic open spaces.

Chonzi said to avoid a possible outbreak of the disease, the city had activated its epidemic preparedness and response teams to investigate and trace the origins of all confirmed cases.

“The city will conduct point-of-use treatment of water and distribute aqua tablets to affected households and the community. There will also be water quality monitoring for all water sources,” Chonzi said.

Tafara resident Christine Marenje said the water situation has become so dire that people had begun fighting at the boreholes in the community.

Marenje said her area can go for weeks with no water supply and yet residents are expected to pay for the service.

“Zvinobhowa kuti titerere mvura isipo, kana torwara necholera zvonzi maresidents haasi kuita zvinehutano. Toshanda sei kusina mvura? Haungaudze mwana kuti usarware nemudumbu nekuti hakuna mvura ( It is frustrating to pay for a nonexistent service. When people contract diseases like cholera, they tell us we are being unhygienic yet there is no water. Tell me, how can you tell a child not to get sick because there is no water?,” she said.

Itai Rusike, executive director of Community Working Group on Health, said it is unacceptable that residents continue to be exposed to preventable and treatable diseases like typhoid.

He said the unreliable functioning and prolonged water cuts in Harare leads people to use unsafe alternatives such as unprotected shallow wells.

Rusike added that improving access to water, sanitation and waste disposal should be prioritised in Harare as poor quality water sources undermine health, as do waste disposal in open pits and public sites.

“Harare seems to be hardest hit by typhoid mainly because key dimensions of primary health care (PHC) are much less available and a coherent approach to PHC appears to be missing, despite the increase in preventable and communicable diseases and the rise in urban poverty.

“There is need to develop and implement an efficient and appropriate approach to PHC in Harare through dialogue with urban health services, residents, the local authority and other stakeholders,” he explained.

He also added that waste collection is a billed service by the city, however, residents query whether that money is being channelled to its intended use, or elsewhere.

Rusike said waste management funds should be monitored as such payments should be used for their intended purpose and not abused.

“While residents may contribute to one-off clean-up campaigns to assist with removing waste, this should not replace the HCC’s core obligation,” Rusike told the Daily News on Sunday.

 

Helen Kadirire  •  22 May 2016

Zim commemorates Cancer Day amid equipment, drug shortages

Zim commemorates Cancer Day amid equipment, drug shortages

As the rest of the world commemorated Cancer Day yesterday, Zimbabwe continues to grapple with shortage of drugs, cancer equipment, specialists, as well as lack of adequate information to rein in the disease, which is largely preventable.

By Phyllis Mbanje

Stakeholders are calling on the government to seriously work on domestic financing of cancer awareness and prevention which falls under non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and treat it with the diligence accorded to HIV and Aids.

“We are not doing much in addressing this sitting time bomb which requires substantial resources to make a meaningful impact,” Itai Rusike, the director of the Community Working Group on Health (CWGH), said on Wednesday.

Treatment of cancer, which is one of the largest killers in the country, has remained quite costly for the average person and public health facilities remain underfunded and overwhelmed by the number of patients.

“While everyone has a right to health, many people from poor resource settings have no means and no access to treatment,” Rusike said.

Cancer is preventable, but due to inadequate information and awareness campaigns, many people come forward late when it is almost impossible to reverse the damage.

According to a report from the Zimbabwe National Cancer Registry (ZNCR), more than 6 000 cases of cancer were recorded countrywide last year and the bulk of these presented in last two stages of the disease.

Of growing concern is the emergence of childhood cancers. They accounted for more than 3% of the cancers recorded in 2013.

According to research done by Kidzcan Zimbabwe, in 2014, 243 new cases of cancer in children were reported and 106 children died from cancer-related illnesses.

“Although childhood cancers (age 0-14) are a rare condition worldwide, the incidence in Zimbabwe is rather high,” ZNCR registrar Eric Chokunonga said.

A shortage of cancer drugs has also been one of the biggest drawbacks.

Last year provincial and district hospitals throughout the country faced an acute shortage of drugs for cancer, a situation which put the lives of many patients at risk.

Cancer Association of Zimbabwe (CAZ) monitoring and evaluation officer, Lovemore Makurirofa said they were worried about the shortages, adding any disruptions in taking cancer medication might result in treatment failure.

“Cancer treatment involves killing off the harmful cells and so if treatment is stopped before the prescribed cycles, cancer might recur,” he said.

Meanwhile, cancer patients might get some relief after the National Aids Council managed to procure medication and reagents worth half a million dollars.

February 5, 2016 in National, News

Home births decline in Bulilima

Home births decline in Bulilima

HOME births in Bulilima District in Matabeleland South have declined over the past years, a development that is likely to bring down the county’s high maternal mortality rate.

Zimbabwe’s maternal mortality rate stands at 525 deaths per 100,000 live births, according the 2012 census data. The United Nations considers a maternal mortality ratio of less than 100 as low, between 100 and 299 as moderately low, and high when it is 300 to 499.

Speaking during a media tour organised by the Ministry of Health and Child Care, Save the Children and Community Working Group on Health, the sister-in-charge of Sikhathini Clinic Selulekile Dungeni attributed the decline to community involvement in raising awareness about the dangers of home deliveries.

“Sikhathini Clinic caters for more than 6 villages and some villagers still walk up to 14 kilometres to access medical attention.

“However, we’re happy because the communities have worked hard to spread health messages which saw our home deliveries drop from 12 in 2013 when the programme started to four since the beginning of 2016,” said Dungeni.

“The Health Centre Committee (HCC) sponsored by CWGH and Save the Children actively worked towards building a waiting mothers’ shelter and securing water and electricity for pregnant women which has motivated them to come and deliver at the clinic.”

She said the awareness project had also increased the number of men who accompany their pregnant partners for antenatal care.

Andrew Ngwenya, a member of the HCC said they had mobilised villagers who now appreciate the importance of seeking medical attention while pregnant.

He said certain cultural and religious beliefs were a stumbling block to accessing health care in some communities.

Siphilisiwe Tshongwe from Bezu Clinic in Bulilima, Plumtree District about 30km from Sikhathini, said they had recorded zero home births from January 16 and only two last year.

“We used to lose many lives during home births before the HCC came into existence in 2013 as we had no waiting home shelters or community-based awareness programmes,” she said.

She said it was important for pregnant women to deliver at health institutions with the aid of qualified personnel to avoid complications that could cause maternal deaths.

The World Health Organisation defines maternal mortality as the death of a woman while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and site of the pregnancy.

June 2, 2016 Thandeka Moyo in Bulilima