News / Health
NSSA sets up mobile clinic for miners
04 Aug 2015 at 03:55hrs | Views
The National Social Security Authority has opened a mobile clinic to cater for miners and industrial workers.
Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Prisca Mupfumira commissioned the clinic at NSSA's Willowvale complex in Harare.
The mobile clinic, which is fitted with its own generator, includes an X-Ray room, as well as a consultation room and equipment for testing lung functioning and for determining hearing impairment and testing visual acuity.
According to a press release, Mupfumira acknowledged the importance of the mobile clinic in the surveillance of workers' occupational health.
"Up until this day there has been a significant gap in the regulation and control of occupational disease surveillance of our beloved workers," she said, adding that occupational disease surveillance was an essential component in informing and shaping government policy.
She pointed out that it was in the interests of employers to have a healthy workforce.
She said she was informed that the concept of risk-based medical surveillance would form the basis of the work that NSSA's Occupational Safety and Health division would carry out using the mobile clinic equipment.
"One of the main components of the mobile clinic is diagnosing of a fatal disease called pneumoconiosis, which is a progressive and irreversible disease caused by the inhalation of inorganic or mineral dust.
"Once a worker contracts this disease, it is irreversible. From a policy perspective, we must be seen to remember the old adage that says prevention is always better than cure," she said.
The mobile clinic will enable NSSA's Occupational Safety and Health Division to monitor the health of workers, particularly those employed in dusty occupations, especially in mines, where the risk of pneumoconiosis is greatest.
The clinic's mobile digital X-Ray equipment should enable pneumoconiosis to be detected. The X-Ray equipment and lung function testing facility should also be useful in detecting tuberculosis, which is another disease miners are susceptible to.
Source - NSSA