The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Lives at risk as drug prices soar in Zimbabwe

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HARARE: Since starting treatment five years ago, 50year-old Alice Chenyika kept her blood pressure under control by adhering to doctors’ strict instructio­ns to take two daily doses of nifedipine.

Now Zimbabwe’s worsening economic crisis has pushed prices up, and the medicine is far beyond her reach — one of many signs of the country’s painful transition since the fall of Robert Mugabe a year ago this month.

His successor Emmerson Mnangagwa had promised economic revival after the farm seizures, hyperinfla­tion and internatio­nal isolation of the Mugabe era — but the last 12 months have been tough for Zimbabwean­s.

“When I went to the pharmacy to buy medication, I was told on two occasions that nifedipine was out of stock, which had never happened before,” Chenyika, a widow and mother of one adult daughter, told AFP at her home in Eastview, outside the capital Harare.

When the medicine was back in stock weeks later, the pharmacy was charging US$24 (21 euros) instead of US$6 before for a month of supplies.

“I could no longer afford the medicine, so I started taking herbs as an alternativ­e,” said Chenyika, who lives on her late husband’s US$300 pension from which she pays US$200 monthly to a housing co-operative which built the house she lives in.

Using leaves of the Star of Bethlehem flower from her garden, Chenyika makes a herbal tea which she drinks three times a day.

“I was desperate for a solution and followed some people in the community who have been using the herbal tea. I didn’t get expert advice,” she said, adding she was uncertain if the herbs worked.

“There is no way of measuring dosages. I am taking the tea because I have no other choice.”

Zimbabwe endured severe economic decline under Mugabe, who ruled from 1980 until he was ousted a year ago, as agricultur­e collapsed due to the farm seizures, millions fled to seek work abroad and investment collapsed.

Mnangagwa, Mugabe’s former deputy and veteran of the ruling ZANU-PF party, has faced a new wave of turmoil as prices rocket and shortages spread, from bread to fuel.

Pensioner Martin Kapeta, 71, has resorted to skipping some doses of the two drugs he takes for diabetes and hypertensi­on.

Kapeta who gets a pension of US$153 needs US$57 for a month’s supply of the two drugs — amlodipine and actraphane — up from US$12.

“This is not the life we used to live. Those in authority should do something or we will die,” Kapeta said.

The situation has left doctors in a dilemma.

“We are finding it difficult to prescribe drugs,” Norman Matara, a medical doctor and board member for the advocacy group Zimbabwe Associatio­n of Doctors for Human Rights, told AFP.

“Instead of prescribin­g what’s good for the patient, we are forced to prescribe what’s there and what’s there is changing every time.

“There are no drugs available in the public health facilities, and the situation is dire as well in the private sector.

“People are sourcing medicine from neighbouri­ng countries.

“We are going to see more people developing complicati­ons and also premature deaths.”

The latest bout of trouble erupted last month when Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube announced a two-percent tax on all electronic transactio­ns to increase revenue.

Many Zimbabwean­s rely on electronic payments as US dollars, which function as the main currency, are scarce, and the local ‘bond note’ currency is little trusted.

Mnangagwa last month urged citizens to stay calm as drivers queued for hours for rationed petrol and those with money stockpiled any food for sale. — AFP

 ??  ?? Chenyika resorts to taking herbs as an alternativ­e to prescribed medication after the Nifedipine she formerly used to control her blood pressure with ran out.
Chenyika resorts to taking herbs as an alternativ­e to prescribed medication after the Nifedipine she formerly used to control her blood pressure with ran out.
 ??  ?? NORMAN MATARA
NORMAN MATARA

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