Dire Health Situation
Johannesburg - 24 May 2007 – The dire lack of health
care workers in southern Africa is threatening efforts to expand
access to HIV/AIDS treatment, warned the international medical
humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières
(MSF) in a new report issued today. The report covers four southern
African countries - Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique and South Africa
- where more than one million people still need life-saving antiretroviral
treatment but do not have access to it. Lack of action will result
in unnecessary illness and death.
“In Thyolo district we are treating 7,000 people with HIV/AIDS.
We need to increase this number to 10,000 by the end of the year,
but our programme is hitting a wall because there are simply not
enough nurses, doctors and medical assistants,” said Veronica
Chikafa, a nurse/matron working with MSF in Malawi.
Severe shortages of health staff are compromising the quality
and availability of HIV/AIDS care across southern Africa. In Thyolo
district in Malawi, a medical assistant can see up to 200 patients
per day, far too many to ensure quality care. In Mavalane district
in Mozambique, patients are forced to wait for up to two months
to start treatment because of the lack of doctors and nurses,
and many have died during the wait.
In Lesotho there are only 89 doctors in the whole country. "Providing
HIV care in rural clinics depends on nurses, but they are overwhelmed
by the number of patients” said Dr Pheello Lethola, Field
Doctor for MSF in Lesotho. “Consultation times are too short,
and sick patients suffer needlessly. When nurses suffer, patients
suffer."
There is wide acknowledgement of the human resource crisis, but
little action on the ground. MSF is urging governments to develop
and implement emergency plans to retain and recruit health care
workers that include measures to raise pay and improve working
conditions. In most countries this will only happen if donors
change their policies and start providing financial support for
recurrent costs such as salaries. Ministries of finance and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) will need to find solutions
to overcome “caps” on the number of health workers
and level of salaries. Otherwise, governments will not be able
to respond adequately to the unmet need for treatment.
Even in South Africa, which has more health care workers who
are better paid compared to other southern African countries,
unequal distribution and inadequate numbers of staff are causing
delays to expanding treatment. "Clinics are absolutely saturated,
waiting lists are growing, and it feels like we are losing the
battle, “said Dr Eric Goemaere, head of MSF’s programme
in Khayelitsha, Western Cape. “For people making policies
in offices far away from patients, our message is that you will
be held responsible if you are not reactive or flexible enough
to find solutions to the staff shortages".
To expand access to HIV care in rural settings MSF teams have
relied on "task-shifting" from doctors to nurses and
nurses to community workers. But these are limited measures that
do not remove the need for additional skilled staff.
"It is incomprehensible that donors provide funds for life-long
aids treatment and the building of new clinics, but refuse support
for health care worker salaries on the grounds that this is 'unsustainable,'"
said Sharonann Lynch, Treatment Literacy Coordinator for MSF in
Lesotho. "People living with HIV/AIDS do not only need drugs
and clinics; they need trained, motivated health care workers
to diagnose, monitor, and treat them."
| In the four countries profiled in this report, MSF is
presently providing antiretroviral treatment (ART) for nearly
30,000 people. Worldwide, MSF provides ART to over 80,000
patients in more than 30 countries. |
|