Letters: Govt must reward health workers

Letters
Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) calls upon the government to remunerate the health workers well and improve their working conditions

AS the World celebrates  Workers’ Day today, the Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) calls upon the government to remunerate the health workers well and improve their working conditions to curb the current brain drain that has quickened the collapse of the sector.

Let us also make sure that health workers are provided with all the necessary tools of the trade, health institutions are well equipped with the essential medicines and modern medical equipment.

One of the major challenges facing the Zimbabwean’s public health care system is brain drain. Doctors, nurses and pharmacists have left and continue to leave the country to destinations like South Africa, United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia to name just a few. In fact, Zimbabwean health professionals are found in nearly all countries, including non-traditional destinations such as Turkey, United Arab Emirates and Spain.

The country has failed to stabilise the brain drain, and some health facilities are operating with skeletal staff due to lack of staff thereby overwhelming the few health workers that have remained resulting in staff burnout and low staff morale.

Health care workers (HCWs) continue to be trained but fail to fill the posts established in the 1980s, let alone the posts and establishment required to deal with the current population, disease epidemiology and health and development targets. They have continued to enrich other establishments and countries while the gap they leave in the country’s institutions continues to glare.

The current economic downturn characterised by the high cost of food prices as well as spiralling inflation has unfortunately worsened the situation.

As we celebrate May 1, we must remember that many workers are being injured or dying in avoidable work-related incidents. The CWGH expresses its solidarity with all workers in formal, informal, rural, urban and domestic employment in Zimbabwe. - Itai Rusike

 Community Working Group on Health director

 ZIMBABWE is in a crisis where everyone is incapacitated to an extent of not carrying out their normal duties because of poor remuneration, thereby crippling the country.

Top government officials sacrifice the few available resources on arbitrary arrests, abductions, torturing and harassment of political activists who speak out and denounce corruption.

A very good example is the unjustified arrest of Hopewell Chin’ono, Job Sikhala, Jacob Ngarivhume (recently jailed three years), just to mention a few.

The President Emmerson Mnangagwa-led government should proffer solutions to a myriad of challenges facing the economy.

Instead of addressing this free-for-all corruption, they make legislation likely to be used against those criticising the rot in government.

The masses who have become the target of State repression have nothing to do with these superpowers who have imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe.

We have a president of the Zimbabwe Miners Federation Henrietta Rushwaya caught at the airport trying to smuggle 6kg of gold to Dubai, but it looks like her case is almost collapsing. We also have Uebert Angel calling himself the second-in-command yet we have a sitting Vice-President.

Such is a crisis in a country were 90% are living under the poverty datum line and the rich are getting richer.

This talk of sanctions is just a ruse. There is a lot happening behind the scenes.

Of course, the people know what is happening and cannot only gasp and swallow under a barrage of propaganda and spin from the State media. - Citizen

 

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