Under
the Zambian Red Cross home-based care programmes, the most vulnerable
and their families are assisted with supplementary food, psychological
support, and advice on how to care for the ill (p4471)
Last
year, 120,000 people died from AIDS-related diseases in Zambia,
and 1.2 million people in the country are known to be HIV-positive.
Red Cross volunteers often provide vital support and companionship
to them (p4473)
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Lack of means and will thwart Zambia’s
AIDS battle
21 March 2003
by John Sparrow in Maamba
In the coal-mining township
of Maamba, Leonard is living with HIV/AIDS. He may know it. He may
not. There is no HIV testing in this impoverished corner of southern
Zambia, where health professionals fear that 30 to 40 per cent of
the population could be infected but those who are rarely admit it.
Rather than AIDS, they have tuberculosis or skin disease or fungal
infections. They acknowledge only the symptoms.
Leonard (not his real name) has TB and the Zambia Red Cross volunteer
who cares for him monitors his medication and does all she can to
ensure a proper diet. She must tread warily as she prepares to discuss
his root problem.
“You have to pick the right moment,” says 39-year-old
mother of five Phoebe Silungwe. “Wait for a mood that makes
it possible.” Leonard is an intelligent man and she believes
he knows the truth already. He has, she thinks, been in denial but
having won his trust she hopes he will himself now raise the question.
With 1.2 million Zambians known to be HIV positive, among them over
21 per cent of adults, Maamba reveals a parlous state of affairs,
a sorry reflection on the political will and resources made available
to fight the African pandemic.
Health facilities throughout the country are over-stretched and under-funded,
and this district’s needs go beyond support for testing and
counselling. Essential drugs are sometimes missing. It isn’t
just life-saving anti-retroviral programmes, accessible to all in
the wealthy world, which are out of reach. The supply of basic drugs
needed to treat opportunistic disease can be interrupted.
At Maamba’s 250-bed hospital, serving a district of 150,000
people, executive director Isaac Kasaro agonizes over budgets. “If
we had a constant supply we could prolong life and ease the suffering,”
he argues. “The demand is so huge we run out of things and that
endangers our patients’ lives. At the moment we are out of the
drug we use in TB relapse. There is none in this region and TB is
the most widespread of all opportunistic diseases.”
Since becoming ill in 1997, Leonard has relapsed three times and acquiring
the drugs he needs has often been a struggle. When available, TB medication
is free, but other drugs must be paid for. Doctors issue prescriptions
and patients buy from private pharmacies. With the coal mining industry
in serious decline and unemployment high, few can afford it and even
if they can the district has no pharmacy. The nearest source of drugs
is Lusaka, the Zambian capital, more than 400 kilometres away.
Help has come to Leonard from a Zambia Red Cross integrated home-based
care programme, funded through the International Federation. The scheme
supports 239 township households where someone is suffering from AIDS-related
disease. Working closely with the hospital, which identifies the clients
from clinical evidence, it provides medication and food, care and
counselling, and has served as a pilot for Red Cross programmes elsewhere.
Growing steadily, it faces enormous needs. Dr Kasaro, who is social
advisor to the Zambia Red Cross and a member of its national executive,
spells it out. “I would say 40 per cent of the population this
hospital covers are in need of home-based care. Right now the programme
is limited to the 11,000 people of the township but it is imperative
it reaches into the district.” More care facilitators like Phoebe
Silungwe are being trained, and plans formulated.
Less than a year in operation, the programme’s immediate aim
is to spread within a radius of five kilometres around the township.
Margaret Siatwinda, the Red Cross project officer, says, “We
are moving as fast as resources allow. The farther away the villages
are, the worse the situation, the harder it is for people to cope.”
The truth is there is no health care for many rural people. They can
walk for hours to reach the nearest clinic, which is understaffed,
often with poorly trained people, and poorly stocked with medication.
Some dispense little more than aspirin. There is no outreach service
and the sick and immobile are frequently left to their own devices.
The government has attempted to widen health-care access by decentralizing
services, but the need is overwhelming.
Meanwhile, Leonard struggles even in the township and he calls the
Red Cross programme “manna from heaven”. Without it not
only he, but his family, would be in more dire straits.
Poverty bites. Soon after falling ill in 1997 he was made redundant
from the failing mine. One day he had a well-paid job, the next day
no income because the mine could not afford redundancy payment. The
government has shouldered the burden but only advances a small amount
from time to time. Leonard and his wife have seven children to feed,
clothe and educate and it is doubtful that they can manage much longer.
Red Cross coverage of other needs does ease the burden. Besides the
medicines and vitamins he needs, food from the International Federation’s
Southern Africa Food Security Operation is a vital component of the
Red Cross programme.
People living with AIDS are among the most vulnerable of the three
million Zambians needing assistance in the continent’s enduring
food crisis. Good nutrition is essential to resist the illness, and
ward off early death, and without food even the taking of medicine
is difficult. “When you don’t eat, the drugs make you
sick,” Leonard says.
Some people cannot face it and interrupt their treatment. Margaret
Siatwinda reports that since food was introduced to the programme,
clients have retained better health, and early death is less frequent.
A long struggle lies ahead, one that calls for the introduction to
Maamba of HIV testing and counselling. “There is tremendous
ignorance here of who is infected,” says Siatwinda. “For
people to be helped, and to protect their loved ones, they have to
know what is wrong with them.”
Related links:
more on: Reducing the impact
of HIV/AIDS
Zambia: appeals, updates
and reports
News story: Zambia's lost generations
News story: Orphans the first to suffer
Southern Africa Food
Crisis
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