“Dead Bodies Are Lying Everywhere At Parirenyatwa” – Ex-Minister On Covid-19




Spread the love

Former Deputy Finance and Economic Minister Terrence Mukupe has bemoaned the state of Parirentaywa Hospital and said he visited the facility and saw “dead bodied lying everywhere”

Mukupe said his friend was recovering from a heart ailment when they were diagnosed with COVID-19 and deteriorated after that:

I’m disappointed…. a friend goes into Pari with a heart condition, tested for Covid and was negative… was getting treatment for the past 8 days and responding well, family was talking and laughing with her yesterday…. goes into a coma suddenly overnight and has contracted Covid whilst in hospital!!! Manje tikarwara toendepi….. Been to Pari… dead bodies everywhere of people dying from Covid…. clearly the health institution is overwhelmed…. Mwari pindirai!!!

A similar report was given by doctors who spoke to Aljazeera and said Parirentatwa has 3 ICU beds and key health staff were not volunteering to work in the COVID-19 unit at the hospital because of lack of equipment and PPE.

The Information Ministry permanent secretary said hospitals are overwhelmed with patients as he urged people to adhere to COVID-19 restriction measures.

Doctors in Zimbabwe have said the health system is overwhelmed and could collapse as the country battles a new wave of infections that has prompted a strict new 30-day lockdown.

After the Christmas holidays, Zimbabwe recorded an increase in Covid-19 infections and deaths, raising fears for an already fragile healthcare system.
The government has urged citizens to adhere to the lockdown, which includes movement restrictions to all but the most essential services.
The reopening of schools has been postponed indefinitely, following a Covid-19 outbreak in schools last term, while shops will only be open until 3 pm daily.
A dusk-to-dawn curfew is also in place to avoid night gatherings and events.

Across Africa, the pandemic reveals both inequality and innovation

The hosts of a New Year’s Eve dancehall concert who flouted an earlier ban on gatherings of more than 100 people were jailed by Zimbabwean court on Monday for six months.
The party attracted thousands of unmasked revelers in the country’s oldest township, Mbare.
On Tuesday, Zimbabwe recorded 1365 new cases and 34 deaths, according to the Ministry of Health daily updates. As of January 5, Zimbabwe had recorded 17 194 cases and 418 deaths, according to the ministry but there are concerns that the number of cases could be significantly higher due to poor testing.
The Zimbabwean Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR) says the country’s hospitals are unable to deal with an increased demand for admissions in a new report released Wednesday.
“ZADHR notes with concern the limited capacity of local health facilities to accommodate cases that need treatment. The continued surge in new infections has caused the hospitals to be overwhelmed and fail to cater for the increased number of COVID-19 related hospital admissions,” the body said.
The organization is also concerned about a spike in infections among frontline workers. Nearly 1000 frontline workers have been infected by Covid-19 in Zimbabwe due to lack of personal protective equipment (PPE), the doctors say.
“Our conservative estimates point towards over 1000 health workers being infected with COVID-19.

Africa's leaders forced to confront healthcare systems they neglected for years

Medical associations have continued to highlight the worrying trends of health workers working without adequate PPE,” ZADHR said.
The doctors also raised the alarm over limited capacity to deal with critical patients in need of intensive care, while admission beds remain low.
“ZADHR condemns in the strongest terms possible the sad situation of continued limited ICU capacity almost ten months after the detection of the 1st COVID-19 case,” the doctors said.
However, Zimbabwe’s Secretary of Information, Nick Mangwana told CNN that the government is “on top of the situation.”
“Right now, our capacity is not stretched. We are however dealing with a fluid situation where if a frontline worker tests positive, it affects capacity.”
“The reason why I said this thing could overrun us is because people were not complying with lockdown rules, so we saw the storm coming,” Mangwana said.

Zimbabwean billionaire pays striking doctors to return to work

Last year Zimbabwean doctors took the government to court over failure to provide PPE and other safety equipment.
Zimbabwe’s health system has been facing headwinds owing to lack of funding, with health workers at loggerheads with the government over poor, and often unpaid, salaries.
Last year billionaire, Strive Masiyiwa intervened to get doctors back to work following months of horse-trading with the authorities.