Cabinet wades into striking doctors’ issue

via Cabinet wades into striking doctors’ issue – NewsDay Zimbabwe 10 November 2014

REPRESENTATIVES of the 400 striking doctors at public hospitals have been summoned to an urgent meeting with Health and Child Care minister David Parirenyatwa today to discuss the latest “communication from Cabinet Office” regarding their two-week-long industrial action.

In a letter dated November 7, addressed to Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors’ Association (ZHDA) president Fortune Nyamande, Health ministry permanent secretary Gerald Gwinji said the meeting would be held at Parirenyatwa’s offices this morning.

Gwinji stated the agenda of the meeting as “communication from Cabinet Office”.

Junior doctors at government hospitals have been on strike for the past two weeks to press for a pay rise of around 400%, in addition to a review of their housing, transport and risk allowances.

Senior and middle-level doctors have since joined the strike, forcing government to rope in doctors from the security sector as a stop gap measure.

The situation has spawned a rise in the numbers of low-cost private clinics to cater for the poor, as the skeleton staff at public hospitals were only attending to emergencies while turning away non-critical patients.

The salary negotiations stalled after government refused to commit itself to a review citing limited fiscal space.

Zimbabwe government hospitals have, since independence in 1980, suffered perennial staff shortages, low staff morale as well as a lack of equipment and essential drugs.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 1
  • comment-avatar
    Tsotsi 9 years ago

    I qualified as a doctor in Zimbabwe in 1983. It soon became obvious that it was not worth staying: but there was some apprehension that our training would not be ‘up to scratch’ with overseas standards.

    As many others have found and can testify, there was nothing to worry about: we were seriously well trained and ex-Zimbabwean doctors have flourished wherever they ended up.

    There is nothing that ZANU PF and Mugabe have not ruined, including the excellent healthcare system inherited at independence.