(From Swazi Media Commentary, 21 November 2010, www.swazimedia.blogspot.com Also
on Face book at 
http://www.facebook.com/Swazi.Media.Commentary?v=wall#!/group.php?gid=142383985790674&ref=ts).





  In the week that it was announced that approximately 35 doctors and 245 
nurses per day for a 
year would be taken away from front line health services so they can 
perform pointless
 circumcisions on men, comes news that Swaziland’s health service is
 in such a state that community leaders are being given basic medical 
training because there are not enough doctors or nurses available.

     Doctors
 Without Borders said that nurses are taking on doctors’ roles and 
community leaders are receiving rudimentary medical training.  The
 group said a ‘dire shortage’ of health professionals prompted them to 
implement a plan using lesser-trained workers to treat people with HIV 
and AIDS.  Community workers are performing HIV tests and 
providing counselling in 21 health facilities in the Shiselweni region, 
the kingdom’s poorest and most remote region with the highest number of 
HIV cases.  The medical group, which is also known by its French 
acronym MSF, said vacancies in the health field are dire. In a report 
released on Wednesday (17 November 2010), they cited statistics from 
2004 in which they said 44 percent of posts for doctors, 19 percent of 
posts for nurses and 17 per cent of nursing assistant posts were 
unfilled.  MSF said life expectancy in Swaziland has dropped from
 60 to 31 in the past 20 years because of AIDS.  MSF 
reported that of the approximately 170 nurses and midwives who graduate 
each year, a large proportion emigrate. Staff attrition to HIV is high –
 at around 4% each year.

     ‘Currently, the Swazi health system is 
benefiting from an influx of skilled Zimbabwean healthcare workers. 
However, if the Zimbabwean economy recovers, many of these workers may 
repatriate. The staffing crisis is further exacerbated by absences from 
work due to training courses, holidays or sick leave – there is often 
only one nurse on duty for a catchment population of between 7,000 and 
16,000.

     ‘In rural areas, in particular, the 
lack of accommodation for health workers makes recruitment and retention
 of staff very difficult,’ the report said.
Link http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2010/11/swazilands-health-crisis.html 





      

-- 
NEW!!!! SSN FORUM IS ON FACEBOOK!!!!
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Swaziland 
Solidarity Network Forum Google Group. 
Visit the group home page at 
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/sa-swaziland-solidarity-eom-forum for more 
options, pages and files.
To post to the group, send email to 
[email protected] or reply to this message.
To unsubscribe, send email to 
[email protected]

Reply via email to