The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Clinics for pensioners rolled out

- Tawanda Musarurwa

HEALTH facilities dedicated to the elderly are being rolled out in the public system nationwide, with the first fixed clinic in the new chain being opened by NSSA in Harare on Friday.

Speaking on the developmen­t, Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Professor Paul Mavhima said Government prioritise­d all aspects of pensioners’ social welfare and so had started the rollout of these health facilities.

The chain of fixed NSSA clinics supplement­s the Authority’s existing mobile clinic system.

“Government’s economic blueprint, the National Developmen­t Strategy 1 (NDS1) prioritise­s social protection for vulnerable members of society who include the aged, orphans and widows.

“NSSA recognises the importance of assisting pensioners to access healthcare as part of its comprehens­ive efforts to improve their welfare through augmenting statutoril­y stipulated monetary benefits with non-monetary benefits,” said Professor Mavhima.

“In the stakeholde­r engagement meetings that have been held so far, access to healthcare services has consistent­ly featured prominentl­y among the uppermost needs of NSSA pensioners.

“In response to this compelling need, NSSA has been using its mobile clinic to provide free medical assistance to pensioners in regions across the country. Since April, the clinic has been to the southern part of Zimbabwe, covering Zvishavane, Gwanda and Bulawayo.”

Social protection consists of policies and programmes structured to reduce poverty and vulnerabil­ity by promoting efficient labour markets, diminishin­g people’s exposure to risks and enhancing their capacity to protect themselves against interrupti­on or loss of income.

The Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on’s Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952, outlines the nine principal branches of social security: medical care, sickness, unemployme­nt, old age, employment injury, family, maternity, invalidity and survivors’ benefits.

NSSA’s mobile clinic was introduced earlier this year, and Professor Mavhima said the programme is ongoing, alongside the introducti­on of fixed clinics.

“NSSA will be purchasing more mobile clinics to enable each region to have its own mobile clinic to facilitate rapid response to issues as they arise,” he said.

The new developmen­t is in line with ILO recommenda­tions.

“Universal social health protection ensures that all people in need have effective access to at least adequate care and is thus a key mechanism for achieving these objectives. It is designed to alleviate the burden caused by ill health, including death, disability and loss of income.

“Social health protection coverage also reduces the indirect costs of disease and disability, such as lost years of income due to short and long-term disability, care of family members, lower productivi­ty, and the impaired education and social developmen­t of children due to sickness.

“It hence plays a significan­t role in poverty alleviatio­n,” said the global body in a 2008 paper entitled “An ILO strategy towards universal access to health care”.

The fixed clinics will serve both pensioners and NSSA staff, as well as serving as a Covid-19 isolation centre for NSSA staff.

The authority has also indicated plans to contribute to the ongoing national vaccinatio­n programme by procuring vaccines for its pensioners.

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