The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt to hire 100 Cuban doctors

- Nqobile Tshili Bulawayo Bureau

GOVERNMENT is set to recruit more than 100 specialist doctors from Cuba to be deployed at the country’s referral and provincial hospitals. In a video posted on the Ministry of Health and Child Care Twitter account last Friday, Dr David Parirenyat­wa said the country has a serious shortage of specialist doctors, hence the need to recruit Cuban doctors. He said Government also wants to learn from Cuba on how to decentrali­se the health sector as it has a uniquely decentrali­sed health system. Dr Parirenyat­wa said the specialist doctors to be recruited would be deployed at provincial and referral hospitals.

GOVERNMENT is set to recruit over 100 specialist doctors from Cuba to be deployed at the country’s referral and provincial hospitals.

In a video posted on the Ministry of Health and Child Care Twitter account last Friday, Health and Child Care Minister Dr David Parirenyat­wa said the country has a serious shortage of specialist doctors, hence the need to recruit Cuban doctors.

He said Government also wants to learn from Cuba on how to decentrali­se the health sector as it has a uniquely decentrali­sed health system. Dr Parirenyat­wa said the specialist doctors to be recruited would be deployed at provincial and referral hospitals countrywid­e.

“Finally, we are hoping to recruit 102 specialist­s to go into mostly our provincial hospitals and of course, some will come to central hospitals. What we are trying to do is to say every provincial hospital should have at least five specialist doctors. At the moment, provincial hospitals have at least one or two specialist­s,” said Dr Parirenyat­wa.

He said the specialist­s would also assist in the training of student doctors, who are disadvanta­ged by shortage of specialist­s in the country.

“Midlands State University has also started a medical school. If you have a medical school at MSU, you need the Gweru Provincial Hospital to have adequate specialist­s so that students are trained properly. So, if you have three specialist­s when you are supposed to have 15, how do you train the students to make them good doctors? National University of Science and Technology has got a medical school, but we need a lot of specialist­s at Mpilo Central Hospital and United Bulawayo Hospitals. At the moment, they are completely inadequate. How do you train good doctors?”

The Minister said his ministry wants to learn from Cuba how to eradicate mother-to-child HIV transmissi­on.

“Cuba has managed to eliminate the transmissi­on of HIV from mother-to-child while we still have a 5,4 percent which is a good figure. We want to go and learn how they did it,” said Dr Parirenyat­wa.

The Minister was not immediatel­y available for comment, but an official in his Ministry said he was supposed to have left the country for Cuba over the weekend to discuss the recruitmen­t of the doctors, among other health matters.

Dr Parirenyat­wa’s announceme­nt comes at a time when newly-appointed Prosecutor-General Advocate Ray Goba says his office also plans to recruit 102 young lawyers to work as prosecutor­s, a developmen­t that should end the secondment of members of the uniformed agencies to the prosecutio­n.

The Government has already given its approval after a long period of recruitmen­t freeze in the public service.

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 ?? — Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda ?? Enterprisi­ng and gifted Mr Tim Dhimba sells wood-crafted chairs at Tinde turn-off along Binga-Bulawayo Highway last week. Craftsmen take advantage of abundant indigenous trees in the area to produce furniture for sale.
— Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda Enterprisi­ng and gifted Mr Tim Dhimba sells wood-crafted chairs at Tinde turn-off along Binga-Bulawayo Highway last week. Craftsmen take advantage of abundant indigenous trees in the area to produce furniture for sale.

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