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ZIMBABWE:
Clinics in three provinces do not have safe water
IRIN News
June 04, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=41429
JOHANNESBURG - Only
half of the health clinics in three Zimbabwean provinces have access to
safe water and the majority of districts face shortages of essential drugs,
according to an NGO monitoring group, the Food Security Network (FOSENET).
Based on information drawn from
52 districts, FOSENET noted that clinics spread across central Zimbabwe
- in Mashonaland West, the Midlands and Masvingo - had the poorest access
to safe water out of the country's eight provinces.
FOSENET found that the availability of antibiotics had also dropped with
curently 58 percent of districts having access, compared to two-thirds
that had access in March.
Provinces like Matabeleland North did not have adequate medical staff
- only half of its clincis had a nurse.
A quarterly monitoring report on health and education released by FOSENET
also highlighted the barriers that poorer communities face in trying to
access health care services. It noted that only 58 percent of the selected
monitoring sites in 53 districts spread across the country had access
to health facilities within five kilometres of their homesteads.
The province of Mashonaland Central and the major cities had the best
health coverage, while those worst served in terms of distance to facilities
were Mashonaland East, Midlands and Matebeleland North and South. Provinces
such as Mashonaland West and East as well as Midlands and Matebeleland
North had a high prevalence of diseases such as cholera and malaria and
yet had the highest percentage of people who walked long distances to
the nearest health centre.
The high cost of drugs was identified as another barrier to health services.
FOSENET's current report noted that the fee levels in clinics varied widely
from Zim $ 120 (US 0.02 cents) to Zim $ 45,000 (US $ 8.43).
Primary clinics and district hospitals do not provide medicine for AIDS
related illnesses and patients have to travel to larger towns to access
such treatment, noted the report.
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