The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Unicef assesses doctors’ strike

- Paidamoyo Chipunza Senior Health Reporter

MORE than half of patients who visited the five referral health institutio­ns during the month-long junior doctors strike found no doctor in attendance, a recent electronic survey carried out by the United Nations Children’s Fund has revealed.

The assessment, which was carried out under Unicef’s U-Report tool, sampled 4 170 respondent­s from which 1 418 reported having visited either Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals (21,2 percent), Chitungwiz­a (14,7 percent), Harare (15,2 percent), Mpilo (39 percent) or United Bulawayo Central Hospitals (9,9 percent) in the past three weeks. Forty-three percent of those who were attended to by a doctor reported that the wait was too long before they received a service and a further 8,3 percent reported having been turned away. The majority of the patients visited the outpatient­s, maternity and emergency department­s. Unicef’s chief of health and nutrition Mr Nejmudin Kedir Bilal said the U-Report tool was an innovation to gather opinions, concerns, comments and feedback on health and social services.

He said health was one of Unicef’s major priorities particular­ly in areas of maternal, new born child and adolescent (young people) health through the Health Developmen­t Fund (HDF).

“What makes it (U-Report) unique is the fact that it helps to obtain the demand/ user/client side of informatio­n for which there are no many instrument­s out there,” said Mr Bilal.

He said since Unicef manages the HDF, which is one of the major sources of funding for Zimbabwe’s health systems, it was also important for the Agency to obtain regular feedback from beneficiar­ies to enable it to monitor the performanc­e of the health systems.

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