The Zimbabwe Independent

Zimbabwean­s turn to medicinal herbs

... as prices of essential drugs spike and public health crisis worsens

- VINCENT MUNGOFA

PEOPLE are flooding traditiona­l herbal markets, as prices of prescripti­on drugs spike and the public health delivery system deteriorat­es at an alarming rate under pressures from a relentless economic crisis, experts said this week.

is comes as regulators, Medicines Control Authority of Zimbabwe (MCAZ) threw caution against unregister­ed medicine.

Many of the vital drugs that patients require are readily available in private hospitals and pharmacies, but are unaffordab­le to the majority of Zimbabwean­s.

In a country where the domestic unit has been battered by an inflation rate estimated at 47,6% in February, consumer buying power has been eroded.

Private players also demand United States dollars, which were this week selling at US$1:ZW$27 000, shutting millions out of the health delivery system.

Experts said as a result, millions were trooping to traditiona­l medicines.

But it is a market fraught with dangers, according to experts who spoke to the Zimbabwe Independen­t.

It is a repeat of the health crisis that shook the country in 2008, when the domestic unit crashed under 500 billion percent inflation, leading to the crumbling of State hospitals and clinics.

Itai Rusike, a public health specialist, told the Independen­t that it was increasing­ly difficult for patients to access drugs in public health institutio­ns.

“Devaluatio­n and consequent inflation have increased the cost of drugs for consumers,” Rusike said.

“Foreign currency shortages undermine drug purchases, hence the significan­t drop in drug availabili­ty at urban and rural clinics due to the increased stock-outs of vital drugs, reducing confidence in the system.

“ is represents an unfair cost burden on poor communitie­s. It also opens the way for the growth of private unregulate­d drug markets and traditiona­l herbal medicine is clearly one way that poor communitie­s are making up for the falling availabili­ty of and access to western medicines,” he said.

However, George Kandiero, president of the Zimbabwe National Traditiona­l Healers Associatio­n (Zinatha) threw caution against the use of herbal medicines, which are sold on the streets and other back stage markets.

“It is very unhygienic for you to be selling your wares on 4th Street (a common herbal medicine market in Harare),” he said, emphasisin­g that patients must make use of registered traditiona­l healers.

“ e advantage of someone (a traditiona­l healer) who is registered is that you are thoroughly inspected and there are standards that you must follow.

“At times you see some of the funny things that people are putting into their bodies, which are very harmful. ey don’t know how long they would have stayed on the streets.

“ e credibilit­y of registered practition­ers is being put at risk. is happens in any other profession where someone is doing a shady job. People end up thinking everyone who is in that profession does the same. Something should be done,” Kandiero added.

MCAZ asserted that many herbal medicines fall under a broad category of medicines called complement­ary medicines and they can be used to treat some conditions or to supplement dietary nutrients like vitamins, minerals among others.

“ e risk in these medicines lies in that not all their side effects and medicinal interactio­ns are known and herbal medicines can only be distribute­d through licenced wholesaler­s,” MCAZ said.

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