Hospitals In Cholera-Struck Zimbabwe Lack Material, Staff, Says UN Health Official
New York, Dec 19 2008 3:10PM
The overall health situation in Zimbabwe, which is suffering from its worst ever recorded cholera epidemic, is “quite
worrying,” with medical staff basically not going to work because their salaries were too small, according to a senior
United Nations health official who has just returned from the southern African country.
“I have seen hospitals that were basically empty – ghost hospitals, with no material, no staff,” UN World Health
Organization (WHO) Disease Control and Emergency Operations Coordinator Dominique Legros told a news conference in
Geneva today.
But some government staff had resumed working in centres treating cholera, which has infected more than 20,500 people,
killing over 1,100, said Mr. Legros, who had set up the UN control and command centre for the outbreak in Harare, the
capital.
“Something we have to fix quickly is the discrepancies in salaries,” he added. “There are Government staff being paid
government wages – which was very little in practice – and staff working for non-governmental organizations with much
higher wages. We have to fix that and get incentives for staff to work in the health facilities.”
That was the priority if they were to save lives and improve the quality of care, Mr. Legros said.
The UN is planning for a worst-case scenario of 60,000 cholera cases before the end of the rainy season, based on an
estimate that half of the country’s population is potentially at risk.
ENDS