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Zimbabwe makes strides in bridging gap towards adequate surgical care – The Herald

Rumbidzayi Zinyuke-Health Buzz

As the country celebrates its 44th Independence on Thursday, it is important to highlight the strides made in the health sector in an independent Zimbabwe particularly on surgical care.

Zimbabwe’s health sector has seen significant improvements in recent years owing to the thrust by the Second Republic of ensuring universal access to health.

One such area to record improvements is the field of surgeries. With advancements in technology and increased access to medical resources, more complex surgeries are now being performed in the country with great success.

Until recently, the healthcare system primarily focused on infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and malaria, often relegating surgical needs.

This resulted in a significant shortfall in skilled surgeons, operating theatres, equipment, and infrastructure requirements for safe surgical interventions.

In 2022, the Government launched the first National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Strategy (NSOAS) 2022-2025 which sought to address challenges Zimbabwe faces in providing timely, affordable, safe and quality surgical services. The objective was to promote access to surgical services from district level, a move which has helped strengthen primary health care.

 The strategic document also sought to address infrastructure and equipment related gaps that existed in essential surgical care.

Zimbabwe was the fifth country in the SADC region and 9th in Africa to develop and launch a NSOAS. 

The NSOAS is aligned to the National Health Strategy (2021 -2025) which seeks to achieve the highest possible level of health and quality of life for all people in Zimbabwe by 2030.

With this strategy in place, the country has managed to provide Zimbabweans with an option to receive the best surgical care locally while reducing the financial burden on them.

Government also recognised the need to build a skilled workforce capable of handling surgical procedures. 

There has been an influx of surgeons over the years, who provided training, mentorship, and knowledge transfer to local medical professionals.

The University of Zimbabwe International Centre for Surgical Simulation in 2022 partnered with Karl Storz, a leading global manufacturer to supply laparoscopic equipment for the training centre at the University in Zimbabwe.

This saw the UZ commissioning laparoscopic equipment for training while hospitals such as Parirenyatwa, Mpilo, United Bulawayo Hospitals, Chitungwiza Central Hospital and Sally Mugabe Central Hospital also received laparoscopic equipment that would enable local surgeons to access the inside of the abdomen and pelvis without having to make large incisions on the body.

Laparoscopic surgeries are being performed to date at most of these public hospitals. 

The year 2023 was also a milestone year as the country resumed open heart surgeries at Parirenyatwa Hospital after a five-year break. 

A team of anesthetists, cardiologists, cardiothoracic surgeons and nurses has been diligently providing open heart surgeries since then, ensuring that patients no longer have to travel to India, South Africa and other countries for the same procedure.

Currently, Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals is the only facility in both the private and public sectors in Zimbabwe that is equipped to perform open heart surgeries but the Government has indicated plans to decentralise the surgeries to other hospitals across the country.

With the scourge of cancer growing, many Zimbabweans, both young and old have struggled with the  disease at some point.

Through the provision of surgical services in public institutions, many have survived.

The case of nine-year old Wayne Mukwevere who was relieved of a 15cm wide cancerous neck mass by a team of Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT)specialists last year comes to mind.

The young boy’s journey to recovery began with the removal of the huge mass which had stolen his childhood for more than five years. While he undergoes chemotherapy, surgery improved his life significantly.

Not to be left out, United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) also made history when it became one of the few health institutions in the country to offer hip surgeries. 

As a result of limited expertise in doing these procedures locally and the associated exorbitant costs, many Zimbabweans were travelling to India, South Africa, Malawi and Zambia, among other foreign destinations, for complex medical procedures like organ transplants, corrective orthopaedic hip replacements and knee replacements procedures.

Another milestone was recorded early this year, when three Zimbabwean cardiothoracic surgeons teamed up with a colleague from Spain and successfully carried out a first of its kind extensive uniportal video assisted thoracic surgery (VATS).

VATS is a minimally invasive surgical technique where incisions are made in the chest through one of which a thoracoscope, which is a long thin tube with a camera and light at the end, is inserted, allowing the surgeon to view the thoracic cavity inside the chest on a video screen.

Most recently, a team at Parirenyatwa carried out another precocious surgery on 64-year-old Mr Laston Kwinika from Beitbridge, who had lived with a huge growth in his mouth for 17 long years.

Although he lost the better part of his lower jaw, Mr Kwinika’s life is set for a positive change since the doctors have restored most of his oral functionalities that had been lost in those years. The quality of his life will greatly improve.

These are just a few of the life changing surgeries performed in the country in the recent past. Many more remain undocumented.

In addition to the expertise of the medical professionals, the availability of modern medical equipment and facilities has also played a crucial role in the success of surgeries in Zimbabwe. Hospitals and clinics in the country are being equipped with state-of-the-art technology, allowing for more accurate diagnoses and better outcomes for patients undergoing surgery. This has not only improved the quality of care provided to patients but has also increased the success rates of surgeries performed in the country.

Furthermore, the Government’s commitment to improving the health sector in Zimbabwe has also had a positive impact on surgeries. Investments in healthcare infrastructure has helped to create a conducive environment for the practice of surgery in the country. 

This has not only benefited patients in need of surgical interventions but has also boosted the confidence of medical professionals in their ability to provide high-quality care.

Overall, the success of surgeries in Zimbabwe can be attributed to a combination of factors, including the expertise of medical professionals, the availability of modern medical equipment, and the Government’s commitment to improving the health sector.

With continued investments in healthcare infrastructure and the training of medical professionals, the country is well-positioned to further improve the quality of care provided to patients undergoing surgery.

As more complex surgeries are successfully performed in the country, the quality of life for many Zimbabweans is bound to improve and the Government will surely achieve its vision of leaving no place and no one behind in the provision of quality health care.

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2 000 Women Succumb To Cervical Cancer Each Year In Zimbabwe – Health Minister – pindula.co.zw

The Minister of Health and Childcare, Douglas Mombeshora, says the prevalence of cervical cancer in Zimbabwe is worryingly high, with about 3,000 cases diagnosed each year, reported NewZimbabwe.com.

Addressing journalists and a visiting team from the World Health Organisation (WHO), from Geneva, Switzerland, Momboshera said it was worrisome that more than 70% of people diagnosed with cervical cancer succumb to the disease. He said:

Cervical cancer remains a concerning public health challenge in our country, as it has far-reaching implications for the health and well-being of our citizens, particularly for our women.

The prevalence of cervical cancer in Zimbabwe is worryingly high, with an estimated 3,000 new cases diagnosed each year, out of which an estimated 2,000 women lose their battle to this disease.

This means that more than 70% of people diagnosed with cervical cancer do not survive.

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Mombeshora said the government was committed to attaining its goal of eliminating cervical cancer by 2030. He said:

Today, l want to share a message of determination and hope for Zimbabwe as we proactively take the needed steps to protect our women and conquer this disease in our country.

Over the past decade, Zimbabwe has been steadfast in its commitment to cervical cancer elimination, and today we reaffirm our dedication to this cause and set our sights on the ambitious goal of eliminating cervical cancer by 2030.

The Minister said that since the inception in 2018 of the national vaccination programme against human papillomavirus (HPV), significant progress has been made, with over two million girls jabbed to date.

HPV is the most common sexually transmitted infection (STI). Vaccines can prevent some of the health effects the virus causes. Said Mombeshora:

That is why, guided by our national cancer prevention and control plan, we are making critical strides. Over 200 healthcare facilities across Zimbabwe now offer VIAC (Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid and Camera) screenings, and 60 locations provide HPV tests. These expanded services are empowering women with the tools for early detection.

VIAC is an effective way to prevent cervical cancer in women aged between 30-50 years old. The procedure involves examining the opening of the womb, or the cervix, for changes that might lead to cancer.

The delegation from WHO Geneva, Switzerland later toured Chinhoyi Provincial Hospital and Umboe Clinic in Mhangura, situated about 40km from Chinhoyi.

The WHO entourage, accompanied by the Health Minister who is also Mhangura Member of Parliament (MP) and Mashonaland West Provincial Minister Marian Chombo.

More: Pindula News

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Ministry orders forensic audit at Cimas – The Herald

Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

THE Ministry of Health and Child Care has ordered an independent forensic audit into the operations of Cimas following allegations of financial impropriety running into millions of US dollars.

Problems at the country’s second largest health service provider after PSMAS saw an extraordinary general meeting due to be held last week being aborted at the last minute as the board sought guidance from the ministry which had expressed reservations on the proposed meeting.

Cimas Health Group has of late been in an eye of a storm after one if its executives, in a boardroom dispute, accused the firm of embarking on unviable expansion projects locally and abroad.

Other allegations raised by general manager, Dr Sacrifice Chirisa, include the awarding of contracts to friends, siphoning of money through renovation of clinics at unsustainable costs, and issuing of loans to top management totalling US$10 million.

The Ministry of Health and Child Care, which is the regulator of all medical aid societies, has since appointed Ralph and Bommet Accounting and Audit firm to carry out a forensic audit.

While the Government is insisting on a forensic audit by an independent audit firm, Cimas seems content with an audit carried out by an accounting firm it has appointed.

Permanent Secretary for Health and Child Care Dr Aspect Maunganidze said as a regulator, they were keen to have an independent forensic audit done at Cimas to clear allegations of financial impropriety.

“We are simply saying let’s have a forensic audit done by an independent firm. We are doing this for the benefit of members,” said Dr Maunganidze.

“We have received allegations of financial malfeasance from different stakeholders and as a regulator we have to act accordingly.

“It’s only an independent forensic audit that can settle the issue.

“We are in the process of writing to them and responding to their letter on the issues we raised.”

Cimas board chairperson, Mrs Emma Fundira, declined to comment neither did she respond to inquiries sent to her.

However, the board later issued a statement saying they were content with a forensic audit they initiated.

The board said the planned extraordinary meeting was meant to respond to allegations of financial mismanagement raised by Dr Chirisa, adding that they had advised the regulator of their intended meeting.

They reckoned that earlier on in February, the ministry had directed that the board-initiated forensic audit be suspended and replaced by a ministry-led audit.

The board engaged the ministry and advised it to review its proposed directive, as the board-initiated independent forensic audit had already been concluded by the time of the Ministry’s letter.

The board further advised that in the circumstances, the ministry’s suggestion of a second forensic audit at the membership’s cost was unnecessary, reads the statement.

On April 4, the day of the general meeting, Cimas received two letters from the minister’s office advising that the meeting should not proceed.

In view of this communication, the board decided to postpone the EGM pending engagement with the ministry. As stated at the meeting, the board’s attitude is that while it had every right to proceed with the meeting, its preference was a situation whereby there is alignment with the Ministry.

Commenting on the statement by the board, former long serving Cimas board member, Mr Chester Mhende, said the medical aid society ought to comply with the directive of the Government and could not hide behind the fact that they are a private entity.

“The Government has a right to protect members and the public. They are not a private company but a society constituted by members and the Government is there to protect the public interest.

“If they do not want the involvement of the Government as a regulator, why do they approach the central bank looking for foreign currency,” said Mr Mhende.

“The guiding principle is that medical aid societies have a tax free status and this is for the public benefit through reduced costs.”

In his petition to the parent Ministry, Dr Chirisa, who has since been fired, had raised several allegations against the society which he said formed the basis of his victimisation by the group’s chief executive officer, Mr Vulindlela Ndlovu.

Some of the projects he described as unviable include renovation of the Borrowdale clinic for US$2 million despite it being a rented building, renovation of a Mashonaland Holdings building budgeted at US$3 million whose costs are now higher than what was used originally to build it, and buying of companies in neighbouring countries believed to be “shells”.

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Remembering the Zimbabwean health care system’s heyday – The Zimbabwe Mail – The Zimbabwe Mail


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WARDS bustling with highly motivated health care workers, readily available medication, decent salaries, a thriving teaching hospital network — this defined Zimbabwe’s health care system in the 1980s. Back then, it was considered a model of efficiency and effectiveness in Africa.

Today, however, the system is broken. Shortages of medical supplies, a crumbled infrastructure, and a mass exodus of health care workers have left the country unable to meet the needs of its people.

Among those left questioning the decline is Stella, who worked as a nurse in Zimbabwe in the 1980s and witnessed the system’s heyday.

She, like many others, wonders: What went wrong? Stella, who chose to be identified only by her first name for fear of stigma, was 19 when she packed her bags to join St. David’s Bonda Hospital, a nurse training institute in Nyanga, east of Harare near the border with Mozambique.

This was in 1959, 21 years before the country gained independence from British colonial rule and four years after her mother died. In fact, it had been her mother’s idea that she join nursing school. “[She] told me that I would be able to take care of myself if I became a nurse,” she says.

Soon after graduating, Stella moved to Zambia (then Northern Rhodesia) where she worked for two decades as a nurse at a copper mine hospital. Once Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980, she returned home and secured a job as a nurse in the capital of Harare.

Working in Zimbabwe immediately after independence was a stark difference for Stella compared to what she witnesses today. Health care workers had the resources to treat patients. “Ambulances were readily available,” says Stella, who also worked as a midwife at a local clinic.

Felix Manyimbiri, a retired teacher, also remembers the good days. For him, it was the 1960s. “I had pneumonia when I was around 10 years and at that time there were no clinics in our rural home. I was ferried in a Scotch cart to Ndanga District Hospital and got admitted for four days.

I received good medical care; the doctor was on call 24/7,” the 70-year-old says. His wife, Moudy Manyimbiri, 62, remembers giving birth to their first child in 1980 at what was then Gweru General Hospital, a public hospital.

“The nurses were there and provided a service I loved, all the necessities like cotton wool [and] Betadine [topical antiseptic], among others, were provided for,” she says, a smile plastered on her face. The rewards for health care workers must have been good too, she says.

“Nurses could afford to buy cars.” Zimbabwe’s health care system even gained a reputation as a medical tourism destination within the region, says Dr. David Parirenyatwa, who served in the Ministry of Health and Child Care as a deputy minister (1998-2002) and minister (2002- 2009, 2013-2018).

In fact, members of the Central African Federation, an economic and political alliance between Southern Rhodesia, Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland (now Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi, respectively) considered Zimbabwe their health hub, Parirenyatwa says.

“The capital of the federation was Salisbury, now Harare, so things were happening here. The University of Rhodesia was the [training] university for the whole federation,” he says, adding that citizens from the federation countries sought treatment at Andrew Fleming Hospital (now Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals) and Harare Central Hospital (now Sally Mugabe Central Hospital). “It was more like the medical tourism center,” he says.

This was a significant revival from the country’s colonial past. During Ian Smith’s rule, who served as prime minister of what was then called Southern Rhodesia, from 1964 to 1979, health care favored the white minority population.

For example, government funding to private services, which catered to whites, was five times more than public medical services in cities — and 36 times more than public funding in rural areas. Urban areas were staffed by 389 doctors, compared to just 11 doctors in the rural areas where 80 percent of the population lived, according to figures from Zimbabwean researcher Neddy Matshalaga.

But Robert Mugabe — who became Zimbabwe’s first post-independence prime minister — would soon overhaul the system. In 1975, Mugabe led a civil war against the white minority regime and in 1980, the country gained independence. Mugabe soon invested in health care, especially in rural areas, to address disparities.

He allocated more resources to health care, built more facilities and increased immunization programs, to mention a few efforts. In 1978, 134 World Health Organization member states — including Zimbabwe — had made a commitment at the Alma-Ata conference in Kazakhstan to protect and promote health for all people around the world. Parirenyatwa says that in the early and late 1980s, several countries provided Zimbabwe with aid.

“There was a lot of goodwill, health grew, and Zimbabwe was a center for all,” he says. “We became top-notch.” This didn’t last long. Zimbabwe’s health care system began to crumble. The terms of the Lancaster House Agreement, signed in 1979 to abolish the white-dominated regime and pave the way for an independent Zimbabwe, were expiring.

The most significant of the terms was white farmers’ right to retain the land they occupied for 10 years, and in return the British would fund half the cost of a resettlement scheme for black farmers. “Talk of taking the land back started, things started to go on a downward trajectory,” Parirenyatwa says. Sanctions followed. Funding to health care was reduced.

Parirenyatwa’s voice drops to a murmur as he recalls that time. “In 2000s, people [black majority] started taking their land back. 2002 sanctions were put in place. Things started going haywire.” Aid organizations stopped funding the health care system. For example, in 2002, the European Union withdrew its funding.

Some groups packed up and left incomplete projects, Parirenyatwa says. The consequences of Zimbabwe’s dependency on donors became evident. In the 2000s, the economy in Zimbabwe also deteriorated, causing both a surge in skilled health worker emigration and a reduction in public spending, particularly in the social sector, including health care, according to recent research on Zimbabwe’s health financing policy.

As a result of reduced health spending, the government implemented both formal and informal user fees, decreasing the population’s access to health care. In 2006, as Zimbabwe’s economic crisis intensified — marked by inflation surpassing 1,000 percent — Stella says she began to notice changes. Salaries were low. Staff morale plummeted.

Medical staff no longer upheld ethics. “I felt hurt and sad knowing that people were being made to buy [supplies] that they should get for free,” she says, frowning in disgust at the memories. Things got even worse. Damaged beds remained unrepaired. A ward that previously accommodated 10 beds could only accommodate six, leading to premature discharge of new mothers to accommodate incoming patients. “It was a disaster,” she says as she folds her hands across her chest.

Some of her colleagues migrated to the United Kingdom and Ireland. However, some returned after an inclusive government between Zimbabwe’s ruling ZANU-PF party and the opposition in 2009 adopted a multi-currency system as a measure to restore economic stability and curb hyperinflation.

A period of social, economic and political stability followed. The idea of migrating again was no longer an option for Stella because of her age. “If it wasn’t for age, I would have left again,” says Stella, who officially retired from nursing in 2012 due to age and ill health. Parirenyatwa says signs of the migration of health care workers began around 2002, as the country was going into a crisis due to land reforms.

“Zimbabwean borders became literally porous for our health staff. “South Africa and Botswana were the easiest destinations at the time. Up to now, a lot of our health people are in South Africa. Later on, it was not just South Africa, it was now other areas of the diaspora,” he says. He adds that around 2006, it became severe.

“We began to lose our own specialists, especially in the nursing field — intensive care nurses, theatre nurses,” he says as he leans on his chair, tilting his head. Although there was an increase in doctor positions in 2022, rising from 1,657 to 1,724, 147 doctors still terminated their services, according to data from the Health Service Commission. The nursing sector experienced a decline, with 1,454 nurses leaving their positions.

“Due to attrition, the number of public sector health workers has been reduced by at least 4,600 since 2019, despite increased recruitment,” says Tryfine Rachel Dzvukutu, the deputy general manager of public relations for the commission.

In 2023, the World Health Organization listed Zimbabwe as one of the 55 countries that face the most pressing health workforce challenges related to universal health coverage. “There are a lot of patriotic Zimbabweans who are leaving, but they are not staying partly because of our conditions of service. I don’t know what we can do to satisfy that.

“We need to make sure those cadres who train have got a future that they can see, promote our own research and fund it — it will keep our people here,” Parirenyatwa says. The five most important elements of any health system, Parirenyatwa says, are human resources, drugs and medicines, infrastructure (buildings and hospital equipment), communication (including ambulances) and financing.

When he worked in the ministry, Parirenyatwa says he advocated for the improvement of conditions of service for health workers and it led to the formation of the Health Services Board in 2005. “That alleviated pressures a bit, but because there were other things like infrastructure and equipment that were not in place, the frustrations continued to be there,” he says.

To specifically address health worker migration, he says it’s important for the government to address the causes first. “Without addressing these causes, we are going to keep having these problems. So it means massive funding in the health sector,” he says.

He adds that the country should at least meet the 15 percent Abuja Declaration threshold for health budgets, as it would bring significant amounts of resources into the health sector. The Abuja Declaration is a commitment that was made in 2001 in Abuja, Nigeria, by African Union heads of state, who pledged to allocate at least 15 percent of their national budgets to their health sectors.

To meet this commitment in 2024, Zimbabwe would need to allocate approximately 8.73 trillion Zimbabwean dollars (448 million United States dollars) from its 58.2 trillion Zimbabwean dollar (2.98 billion-US dollar) national budget to the health sector.

Instead, it has allocated 9.2 percent to the Ministry of Health and Child Care. Meanwhile, the government is offering financial incentives to retain health workers, including regular adjustments to basic salaries to accommodate the rising cost of living and salary-based allowances, some of which are indexed in US dollars to hedge against inflation, says Dzvukutu, the Health Service Commission spokesperson.

Despite numerous challenges, not everything is broken. Zimbabwe’s health sector has shown progress in some areas, particularly in its response to the HIV/ AIDS epidemic. The country was among the worst affected by the epidemic.

It is now one of the few countries in the world that has achieved the 95-95-95 targets at a national level, according to a 2023 report by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, known as UNAIDS. This means that 95 percent of people living with HIV are aware of their status, 95 percent of them are on medication, and 95 percent of those on medication have a suppressed viral load. For Stella, the recovery of the country’s health care system hinges on proper remuneration.

“Most are leaving because they can no longer take care of their families, and general nurses are leaving a lot. I know of a number of people who have left,” she says. “People are leaving for greener pastures. If the pastures become greener here, we will be able to retain our workforce,” she says. —Global Press Journal

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