HealthTimes

Family Health Safe Abortion Special Projects

The Cost of Inaction: Urgent Attention to Abortion Law in Zimbabwe

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By Mildred Mushunje (PhD) & Dean Mutata (BSc,  MSc) Background Zimbabwe’s health crisis is often framed in terms of economic decline or health financing gaps. Yet there is another crisis, silent, gendered, and entirely preventable, rooted in abortion policy inaction. Trapped between inherited colonial law, religious anxiety, and political discomfort and misinformed moralistic judgemental attitudes,

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Breaking News Health News

Zimbabwe Recalls Batch of Azithromycin Over Quality Concerns

Michael Gwarisa

Michael Gwarisa The Medicines Control Authority of Zimbabwe (MCAZ) has issued a Class II recall of a specific batch of Azithromycin 500mg USP tablets after a quality defect was detected, raising concerns over the drug’s effectiveness in treating bacterial infections. The affected product, Batch Number 24050191, was manufactured by Indoco Remedies Limited of India. According

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Pregnant woman fetching water in Gokwe rural Zimbabwe, illustrating maternal health and pregnancy challenges in rural communities
Family Health Health News

“Gore Mwana” Practice Raises Risk Of Birth Complications, Experts Warn

Michael Gwarisa

Michael Gwarisa Zimbabwe’s leading family planning expert and trainer with the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC), Thandekile Munemo, has cautioned women against closely spaced pregnancies, warning that insufficient recovery time between births can pose serious health risks for both mothers and children. The concept of “gore mwana mwawa”, a Shona phrase loosely translated as

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WHO supporting Burundi to investigate mystery haemorrhagic illness outbreak
#NewsInBrief Africa Cross-border issues Health News

Mystery Haemorrhagic Illness Kills Five in Burundi

Michael Gwarisa

Michael Gwarisa The World Health Organization (WHO) is supporting Burundi’s efforts to determine the cause of an illness that has led to five deaths and infected 35 people in Mpanda district, north of the East African country. While preliminary assumptions linked the ailment to Ebola or Marburg virus diseases, Rift Valley fever, yellow fever and

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