Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Nurses e-recruitmen­t decentrali­sed

- Andile Tshuma

THE Government has decentrali­sed the nurse recruitmen­t system, a developmen­t that will see central and provincial hospitals, with effect from next year, selecting applicants.

Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo in a statement said with effect from May 2020, provincial and central hospitals across the country will be responsibl­e for the recruitmen­t of nurses, which will still be done electronic­ally to limit human interface in the selection process and to avoid corruption.

“Going forward the electronic recruitmen­t will be administer­ed by the province and central hospitals starting with the May 2020 intake. Government will continue to put in place measures and policies that will curb corruption,” said the minister.

He said Government had noted with concern social media messages that had circulated leading to demonstrat­ions at Mpilo Central Hospital after scores of people were duped into turning up for politicall­y motivated demonstrat­ions under the pretext of coming to apply for nursing recruitmen­t.

The past few weeks have been chaotic in the city with politician­s and pressure groups castigatin­g the recruitmen­t system which they said marginalis­ed people from Matabelela­nd.

Dr Moyo, however maintained that the recruitmen­t process was fair revealing that a total 102 students from Matabelela­nd Provinces out of 464 benefited from the electronic selection.

“The computeris­ed random nature of the e-selection process eliminates bias, human error and offers equal chances of selection to each and every applicant across the country. The random selection and placement of trainees across the geographic­al regions enables cross fertilisat­ions and experience­s by trainees across the cultural diversitie­s of Zimbabwe.

“The e-nursing recruitmen­t process offered credibilit­y in the recruitmen­t exercise in that it administer­ed the selection on a random basis. This saw a sizeable number of students from Matabelela­nd region being selected and posted to train in other provinces and vice versa,” said the minister.

He urged the public to have faith in the system, which he said was transparen­t and unbiased.

Dr Moyo said Government introduced the e-nursing recruitmen­t process to curtail corruption which had become rampant in the selection process which saw prospectiv­e applicants paying large sums of money to be admitted into schools of nursing around the country.

“This was a recommenda­tion coming from Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission which had done an audit of the recruitmen­t process in all of the Central and Provincial Hospitals and unearthed alarming levels of corruption,” said Dr Moyo.

In a recent interview after the Mpilo Central hospital demonstrat­ions, Bulawayo provincial affairs minister Cde Judith Ncube said the nurse recruitmen­t procedure should offer equal opportunit­ies to applicants in mostly rural areas with limited access to technology and the internet.

“I must say that there should be a way to bridge this digital gap. However, for now we must ensure that the playing field is level so that all prospectiv­e applicants get equal opportunit­ies to apply and be considered. Remember, we have equally deserving prospectiv­e students in rural areas who may fail to apply due to the conditions of their existence. It is unfair and it must be addressed,” said Cde Ncube. — @andile_tshuma

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