COVID-19: Zimbabwe nurses strike over equipment shortages
COVID-19: Zimbabwe nurses strike over equipment shortages
Nurses at one of Zimbabwe’s busiest hospitals were on strike
Friday, complaining of shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE) as the
country battles rising numbers of coronavirus cases.
Nursing staff at Harare’s Sally Mugabe Hospital announced the strike Thursday,
a day after a senior colleague collapsed and died from Covid-19. Numerous other
nurses at the hospital have since tested positive with the virus, while others
are displaying symptoms, Enock Dongo, president of the Zimbabwe Nurses
Association (ZINA), told AFP. “What nurses demanded is PPE. Covid-19 is now at
the workplace and we have no defence,” he said. The nursing strike comes after
the southern African nation registered 34 deaths in 24 hours — the highest
daily toll in the country since the start of the pandemic. Zimbabwe’s confirmed
caseload — 18,675 to date with 446 deaths — is much lower than that of
neighbouring South Africa, which counted a record 21,832 new cases on Wednesday
alone.
But rising infections over the festive period have worried Zimbabweans, many of
whom have scant access to medical care. The government, which is in the midst
of its worst economic crisis in more than a decade, has signalled that its
capacity to deal with the virus has already reached saturation point. Dongo
said that nurses displaying coronavirus symptoms had not been isolated, having
been sent back to their communities and told to await testing next Monday.
Another ZINA official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said nursing staff
were receiving masks but not “shields, gowns, spectacles and other essentials”.
Zimbabwe imposed a strict national lockdown last weekend, with only essential
services such as hospitals, pharmacies and supermarkets remaining open for at
least 30 days. That has sparked major problems for poverty-stricken families
who rely on informal employment.
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