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Harare morphs into COVID-19 epicentre …doctors say city only has 30 ICU beds

BY MOSES MATENGA HARARE City Council yesterday said it was overwhelmed by the soaring number of COVID-19 cases, which has turned it into the epicentre of the pandemic. Acting mayor Stewart Mutizwa said the city’s health delivery system was overwhelmed as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spiral out of control. “As I speak, our great city has become the country’s coronavirus epicentre as figures continue to spiral beyond our control and that of an already overwhelmed health delivery system,” Mutizwa said. “We had hoped that maybe a new year would bring in better expectations against the coronavirus and many of us had relaxed and were no longer practising any preventative measures.” Harare has been recording over 700 cases daily in the past weeks, with many people appealing for oxygen and ventilators on social media as both private and public health facilities are failing to cope with the surge. The country went on a more strict lockdown starting on Tuesday as Information secretary Ndavaningi Mangwana warned at the weekend that Zimbabwe would soon be overwhelmed by the virus. The country as of yesterday had recorded 17 194 cases and 418 deaths, with Tuesday alone recording 34 fatalities and 1 365 new infections. Of the Tuesday infections, 777 were from Harare which also recorded 10 deaths. Mutizwa said residents should act responsibly in times like these to curb the spread of the deadly disease. Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR) secretary-general Norman Matara said Harare’s public hospitals had only 30 ICU beds. “The problem is, very few institutions are admitting COVID-19 patients because bed capacity is very low in public hospitals,” Matara told Al Jazeera news agency. “This means that patients requiring these services will die at home. The few private facilities admitting patients are charging an arm and a leg,” he said, adding that there was need to increase the bed capacity of public hospitals to cope with rising demand. “When the Health minister (Vice-President) Constantino Chiwenga, made his announcement, I think he dwelt too much on the preventive side of things and did not focus on the curative side, the vaccine logistics, how they are going to provide PPE (personal protective eqipment) for frontline workers. A lockdown will slow down the infections after 30 days, but that is not the solution,” Matara said. In a statement, ZADHR said the growing figures of health personnel being infected with COVID-19 in the course of their duties was worrying. “Our conservative estimates point towards 1 000 health workers being infected with COVID-19,” the doctors said while threatening court action to force the government to avail PPE. The acting Harare mayor also warned vendors and other informal traders against defying lockdown regulations saying: “The city would want to warn vendors and other small-to-medium enterprises that have defied the government directive and continue to operate that the long arm of the law will catch up with them and they should stop forthwith all their operations.” “Transpo

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