Mums Charged $5 For Screaming During Childbirth
Date Posted: 15/07/2013
Poor
women have been exploited at their most vulnerable time by a hospital that
charged them $5 every time they screamed during child birth.
The
shocking discovery was made by a U.S. group that campaigns against corruption,
as it released its annual Global Corruption Barometer.
At
the hospital in Zimbabwe, one of the poorest countries in the world, the fine
was said to be for ‘raising a false alarm’, according to Transparency
International.
Women
who were unable to pay the fine were allegedly kept in the hospital until their
families could pay. Interest was also added to the fines, according to the
Washington Post.
Many
mothers already avoid hospital deliveries in the African nation because of the
$50 cost, which is about the third of the average $150 income.
In
a country where nearly 95 per cent of the population is unemployed after years
of economic turmoil and corruption under President Mugabe, and where one in
eight women die in childbirth every day, the fines could rob a woman of a year’s
salary.
A
survey of Zimbabweans found 65 per cent believed the country’s medical services
to be corrupt.
Poor
women have been exploited at their most vulnerable time by a hospital that
charged them $5 every time they screamed during child birth.
The
shocking discovery was made by a U.S. group that campaigns against corruption,
as it released its annual Global Corruption Barometer.
At
the hospital in Zimbabwe, one of the poorest countries in the world, the fine
was said to be for ‘raising a false alarm’, according to Transparency
International.
Women
who were unable to pay the fine were allegedly kept in the hospital until their
families could pay. Interest was also added to the fines, according to the
Washington Post.
Many
mothers already avoid hospital deliveries in the African nation because of the
$50 cost, which is about the third of the average $150 income.
In
a country where nearly 95 per cent of the population is unemployed after years
of economic turmoil and corruption under President Mugabe, and where one in
eight women die in childbirth every day, the fines could rob a woman of a year’s
salary.
A
survey of Zimbabweans found 65 per cent believed the country’s medical services
to be corrupt.
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