UHURU Torch National Race Leader George Mbijima has condemned corrupt practices in the health sector, asking public servants to observe professional ethics and refrain from the ills in service delivery.
Mr Mbijima was speaking at Bwanga Health
Centre in Geita region where he, among other activities, launched the
new maternity building with operating theatre, the courtesy of Amref
Health Africa, Tanzania Branch.
He said there was a time corruption was
rampant in the health centre to the extent of staff refusing to offer
services unless they receive some tokens from the patients.
“Corruption is an enemy to justice but
it becomes more dangerous when it thrives in such sensitive sectors like
health. Please observe professionalism at the highest level possible,”
he said, citing other unethical behaviour as stigma to patients with
permanent diseases like HIV/AIDS.
Mr Mbijima expressed concern over
increasing malaria related cases and deaths, warning patients against
snubbing malaria doses for alcohol consumption. He counseled youths,
advising them to get rid of narcotic drugs which impede their active
participation in economic activities.
The race leader thanked Amref for the
donation of the new facility that will boost Health Centre’s capacity to
serve the population with specialised services including surgical
operations.
Bwanga Health Centre Officer in Charge
Deogratias Rubanzibwa said the availability of the operating theatre
will ease the burden of referring patients to the District Hospital,
which is 60 kilometres away from the centre.
Dr Rubanzibwa however said the facility
still faces critical shortage of essential supplies like drugs manpower,
expressing optimism that the problem might end as the centre transforms
from rural to urban set up.
He decried the financial challenge due
to cost sharing policy, noting that majority poor patients at the centre
were being attended to free of charge.
“We are implementing the government
policy where children under five, pregnant mothers and elders are
treated freely but in my view we are losing a lot compared to the few
patients paying for the services,” he said.
According to Dr Rubanzibwa, cost sharing
arrangement earns the centre about 2m/- monthly contributed through
Community Health Fund and National Health Insurance Fund
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