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Mnangagwa to deploy army doctors at hospitals?

by Staff reporter
15 Mar 2018 at 11:26hrs | Views
There are unconfirmed reports that the government will soon deploy army doctors in central hospitals to avert a crisis caused by striking junior and senior doctors.

Doctors at public hospitals across Zimbabwe have gone on strike and will not return to work until the government meets their demands for better pay and working conditions, a spokesman for a doctors' unions said on Tuesday.

People in the know indicated that to mitigate the impact of the strike, hospital clinical directors were re-arranging and merging their departments while Government roped in professionals from the uniformed forces.

"When some people are not coming to work there is bound to be an impact on service delivery and because these cadres on strike are at the first level of care, the impact is even greater.

"Clinical directors are however, trying to re-arrange their departments to see how they can continue providing a service although it's a bit more work on those available," said the informant.

"The government will deploy cadres from the uniformed forces to also help in reducing the pressure."

Doctors at public hospitals across Zimbabwe have gone on strike and will not return to work until the government meets their demands for better pay and working conditions, a spokesman for a doctors' unions said on Tuesday.

The action is the first major labor dispute under President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who replaced Robert Mugabe in November and whose biggest challenge is fixing Zimbabwe's economy ruined by decades of severe mismanagement.

Cash shortages mean banks are forced to limit withdrawals, unemployment remains above 80 percent and the government still struggles to pay workers on time which prompted frequent public sector strike actions under Mugabe.

"The main issue we have raised currently is that it does not make sense for us to continue working in hospitals that do not have any drugs or sufficient equipment," said Mxolisi Ngwenya, spokesman for the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA), which represents more than 1,000 members.

Junior doctors in Harare went on strike on March 1. As of Monday the labor action had spread to include all public hospitals in the country, Ngwenya said.

The government had not, as agreed four years ago, increased on-call allowances for doctors to $10 an hour from the current $1.50, and has failed to fulfill other promises for better compensation and working conditions, Ngwenya said.

Junior doctors, who earn a basic monthly salary of $329 before allowances, according to Ngwenya, were yet to get duty-free vehicles as agreed previously.

Health Minister David Parirenyatwa said the government was resolving some of the grievances by the doctors and urged them to return to work while waiting for the outcome of a meeting scheduled for Thursday morning.

In the past, the government has deployed army medics to work at major public hospitals when junior doctors went on strike.

At Parirenyatwa, the largest public hospital in the capital, Reuters witnessed hospital staff turning away some patients.

A nurse who only identified herself as Eunice said they were overwhelmed without the junior doctors. Most senior doctors run private practices.

"I was told to go to a (council) clinic because they don't consider my condition an emergency," said Langton Sithole, 39, who said he fractured his arm when he fell from a bicycle.


Source - online