The Intensive Care Unit (ICU) ventilator suites that were donated by businessman and Econet founder Strive Masiyiwa are now in the country ready to be deployed.
Through his Higher Life Foundation Zimbabwe, working with some donor partners, Mr Masiyiwa acquired 45 ventilators suites to be distributed to Zimbabwe’s public hospitals.
The ventilator suites were manufactured in the UK.
Back in April, Mr Masiyiwa said he was going to donate the ventilators which however required time to be produced because of the technology and the supply of parts.
The global community is in unchartered territory as COVID-19 continues to spread and immensely impact the lives of individuals, families, and communities around the world.
Zimbabwe is also facing the pandemic, with confirmed positive cases unfortunately increasing by the day. The total number of confirmed cases in the country at yesterday were 512; with 64 recoveries, 442 active cases and 6 deaths recorded since the onset of the outbreak in the country on March 20, 2020.
The increasing positive cases, and now deaths, point to the significance of the ventilators which, in the fight against COVID-19, can save lives.
Zimbabwe has a critical shortage of ventilators, something that Mr Masiyiwa has acknowledged before.
When he made the pledge, Mr Masiyiwa emphasised that the donation was a “drop in the bucket, in terms of actual requirement” and called on mining companies and corporate player in other industries to follow suit.
In addition to the ventilators, Mr Masiyiwa also secured critical equipment required in creating a “Critical Care” suite, such as oxygen concentrators, which are critical in providing the much-needed oxygen to a patient that is being ventilated, or just needs oxygen therapy.
The equipment that was brought in also includes suction machines, laryngoscopes and consumables such as endotracheal tubes, infusion sets, drip stands, suction tubes, oxygen tubes, syringes, airway-filters, airways and nasal cannulas.
Also supplied along with the ventilators is an oxygen splitter, which allows for a single ventilator to be used by two patients simultaneously.
However, according to sources familiar with the development, this will not be a typical “Charity Donation”, but a model where the ownership of the ventilators remains with Higherlife Foundation and Mars.
Mars will provide technical support such, as service, repair, maintenance and training.
Observers say this is the best arrangement as the burden to keep the ventilators in good working condition is removed from Government, which is often cash constrained due to competing priorities.
The donors and the government of Zimbabwe have agreed that the equipment will be distributed across all the country’s provinces and will also include Mission Hospitals. By their size, Harare and Bulawayo will get the bulk of the equipment.
Mr Masiyiwa is also the African Union’s special envoy to coordinate the Africa private sector initiative for the procurement of personal protective equipment and other essential supplies.
As an AU envoy, Mr Masiyiwa has been working with global entrepreneurs, Sir Richard Branson and Jeff Skoll, and recently announced that 1 000 ventilators are being manufactured in SA, under free license.
He said these will be distributed for free to several African countries including 200 to Zimbabwe 200.