NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Govt suspends private pharmacies, labs, canteens at hospitals

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU

GOVERNMENT has suspended private services such as pharmacies at Staterun hospitals pending investigat­ions into their ownership.

This came at a time the government was still smarting from a US$60 million corruption scandal involving a COVID-19 medical supplies tender.

The scandal, which attracted widespread condemnati­on when the Health ministry was suffocatin­g from a myriad of challenges, resulted in the arrest and dismissal of then Health minister Obadiah Moyo.

“The acting Minister of Health and Child Care (Amon Murwira) is requesting (1) details of all private service providers at all government health institutio­ns, (2) to have their services suspended while investigat­ions on their ownership and authentica­tion of the private public partnershi­ps (PPPs) arrangemen­t are being instituted,” acting Health permanent secretary Gibson Mhlanga wrote in a memo dated July 20 to government-run health centres.

The memo was copied to provincial medical directors and respective chief executive officers of the health institutio­ns.

“These service providers referred to include, but are not limited to (a) pharmacies (b) pathologic­al laboratori­es (c) radiologic­al services (d) canteens and others. Please submit the informatio­n soonest.”

Health ministry spokespers­on

Donald Mujiri on Wednesday confirmed the memo when contacted for comment.

“Yes, I confirm the memo,” Mujiri said, but could not shed more light on the matter.

In January this year, doctors at Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals asked Parliament to intervene and investigat­e Devine Pharmacy which operates within the hospital’s premises, which they said was competing with the public institutio­n and creating loopholes for corruption.

A doctor at the institutio­n told the Ruth Labode-Led Parliament­ary Committee on Health during a visit that some drugs at Devine Pharmacy were 500% more expensive and the outlet was curiously always well-stocked compared to the hospital’s pharmacy.

Doctors were forced to refer patients to the expensive pharmacy as theirs was constantly out of stock, the parliament­ary committee heard.

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