Failing health in Zimbabwe | As the rhetoric about the Zimbabwe elections and who has won (impossible to tell) dominate our newspapers over the next few days, let's not forget the systematic errosion of health and human rights that has characterised that poor country over the past few years. An editorial in The Lancet this week reports that violence and torture have escalated to an alarming degree. As they point out, political repression complicates and fuels the ongoing crisis in health and human rights. Zimbabwe currently has among the lowest life expectancy and highest infant mortality in the world. Around 50% of Zimbabwe's work force have emmigrated - the rest are internally displaced. Zimbabwe's society has responded to systematic torture in much the same way that a traumatised individual does - with hyperarousal, mistrust and avoidance.
Targeted political violence has also disrupted the provision of health care - and legal intervention. Doctors and lawyers who assist those who are the victims of government violence are themselves targeted. Political prisoners are commonly denied access to medical services. Around 90% of documented abuses are perpetrated by state agencies such as police and army who have virtual immunity from any redress for their actions.
Medical organisations, including the South African Medical Association and the World Medical Association have condemned state sponsored violence in Zimbabwe. It is time for Africa - and the rest of the world - to take note and to call for those responsible to be held accountable.
Bridget Farham Editor https://www.bizcommunity.com
| | Headlines MedicalWhere nurses are bullied, the quality of patient care declinesIn workplaces where nurses are bullied, the quality of patient care declines, the health of nurses suffers, and the retention of quality nurses becomes difficult. New technique improves outcome for living donor liver transplantsThe University of Alberta Hospital (UAH) is one of only a few centres in Canada that perform living donor liver transplantation, a surgical procedure developed in the late 1980s that expands the organ donor pool. About 80 liver transplants are done a year in Alberta, 10 of those being living-donor. Health Director's body found[Luyanda Makapela] The City of Cape Town has sent condolences to the family of Executive Director for City Health, Dr Ivan Toms following his death in his home in Mowbray on Tuesday morning, 25 March 2008. Chronic diseasesNigerian Heart Foundation: Adapting MDGS: from heart disease to poverty reduction[Dr Kingsley K Akinroye] The United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are designed to reduce poverty in developing countries by the year 2015. Corporate Social ResponsibilityCompany news: BESTmed announces rugby club sponsorships - Junxion Communications BESTmed, one of the largest healthcare providers in South Africa, has announced sponsorships of R124 000 for the Boland Rugby Union and one of its affiliates, Hillcrest Rugby Club In Wellington in the Western Cape. Dental diseaseCompany news: Introducing a new dental insurance package - Boutique MarketingInsurance is designed to assist you financially when disaster strikes, and dental health insurance follows the same principle. HIV/AIDSNo HIV vaccine in sightAfter more than 20 years, we still don't understand the virus well enough to produce a vaccine. DRC: Rise in TB cases linked to co-infection with HIV As is happening elsewhere in Africa, DRC is seeing a dual epidemic of HIV and TB. Shaky start to AIDS fight in Chad Chronic lack of health workers and uncertain funding have delayed Chad's efforts to stem HIV infections. UK commits R225 m to HIV/AIDS programmes in sub-Saharan countries - British High CommissionUK Government's Department for International Development (DFID) is the largest funder of Southern Africa's most successful TV drama and radios series “Soul City and Soul Buddyz”, with an audience in South Africa of over 70% of the population. Hospital GroupsPrivate hospital networks carry indemnity insurance - Magna Carta Public RelationsMost if not all private hospital networks carry professional indemnity insurance. Infectious diseasesNigeria: Worst cholera outbreak in years in Benue StateAt least 35 people have died of cholera in the capital of Benue State, Madurdi, and the town of Oturkpo. Both areas have a history of cholera outbreaks but the latest toll is far higher than in previous years. Nigeria: Measles kills 165 children in Katsina stateA measles outbreak in northern Nigeria's Katsina state has killed 165 children in the last three months and infected more than 3,000 children, according to health officials. Duck, rice and people also spread bird flu - UNDucks, rice and people, and not only chickens, have emerged as the most significant factors in the spread of avian influenza in Thailand and Vietnam. MalariaTreating malaria in remote areasRectal artemesinin is rapidly effective in early malaria. Medical ResearchTrial expected to show best proven treatment for heart attacks, strokes and diabetes - RedlineThe results of the ONTARGET trial are expected to provide evidence for the best proven treatment that will save and extend lives as well as enhance the quality of life for people suffering from, or at risk of, heart attacks, strokes, diabetes type 2 and other cardio-vascular events. NPOReach for a Dream: Sam's message of hope - Reach for a Dream Foundation While the Reach For A Dream Foundation's twentieth anniversary demonstrates the organisation's enduring significance in bringing some light into the lives of sick children, 21-year old Sam Pretorius is testament to its powerful legacy of inspiration – and finding the impetus to overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles, like life-threatening illnesses. OncologyGroundbreaking surgery removes all abdominal organs to get at cancerIn groundbreaking surgery, a patient has had all of the organs in the abdomen temporarily removed so surgeons could operate on a cancerous tumour. Public healthUN agency declares Somalia polio-freeThe United Nations health agency announced that polio has been eradicated in Somalia, thanks to the efforts of some 10,000 volunteers and health workers across the Horn of Africa. Company news: Control over sales and advertising of tobacco products - Junxion Communications“Tightening up on the control over the advertisement and sale of cigarettes brings South Africa in line with the World Health Organisation's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control,” says Kelly Thompson, trade mark lawyer at Adams and Adams. TuberculosisDrug resistant TB patients return to hospital[Bathandwa Mbola] Most of the 31 Tuberculosis (TB) patients who had run away from a hospital in Port Elizabeth to be with their families over Easter have returned. | |
| News for medical professionals | | Eflornithine effective for treatment of African sleeping sickness
| Very preterm births associated with poor childhood survival and low reproductive rates
| More...   | | Print - Print any item in this newsletter. Email - Email any item in this newsletter. Comment - Comment on any item in this newsletter.
| 
|
| |
Business ServicesMOTORING CORPORATE WELLNESS BUSINESS TRAVEL TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT OFFICE EQUIPMENT
|
|