As warnings of a “moral catastrophe” over the availability of coronavirus vaccines in poorer countries grow, Zimbabwean psychiatrist Dixon Chibanda describes how it would help him and the special team of grandmothers he works with. It has been five weeks since I contracted COVID-19, even though I was doing everything not to get it: masking, sanitising and distancing. The sense of helplessness associated with not being able to breathe as I watched my oxygen saturation fluctuating was profound, even for a medical doctor like myself. I also had the added knowledge that the likelihood of getting oxygen if or when I needed it was next to zero in our resource-strapped country. Struggling with extreme fatigue and intermittent shortness of breath, I realised on day three that I could die. While anybody can die from COVID-19, the risk is higher in a place like Zimbabwe, where the health system is extremely compromised. Indeed, during the same period that I was sick, five doctors I have worked closely with over the years died from it. They had access to medical care and they still died. These individual deaths are devastating. But also, the impact of losing five experienced doctors within four weeks for a country like Zimbabwe represents a significant communal loss. Fortunately for me, on day five of my illness, my oxygen saturation started to pick up. It is not clear why I recovered while some colleagues with similar backgrounds to mine died. There is much to learn about this virus. As I gradually began to improve, my concern shifted to the organisation I have been running for over 10 years, the Friendship Bench. This is a community-based psychological treatment programme delivered by over 700 trained community grandmothers in over 100 communities in Zimbabwe. In a country with just 13 psychiatrists for a population of 16 million, this model has helped expand mental health outreach. It has taken years to build the Friendship Bench model and show that through talk therapy, trained grandmothers can treat depression, anxiety and alleviate suicidal thoughts across communities in Zimbabwe and beyond. ‘Grandmothers are vulnerable’ This past year, these grandmothers have become key frontline workers addressing the high rates of mental illness linked to the COVID-19 crisis. But as the virus spreads faster and as the number of deaths exponentially rise in Zimbabwe, these grandmothers, just like the frontline medical doctors, have become vulnerable. One day I called grandmother Kusi Kwenyu, who has been with Friendship Bench for over 10 years, to find out how the grandmothers are doing in Mbare, the place where Friendship Bench first started. I had not been in touch with any of the grandmothers since I fell ill. As the phone rang, I found myself anxious with a negative premonition. Finally, she picked up the phone. “I’m so happy to hear your voice,” I remarked with relief. “I’m happy to know you are recovering. We have been praying for you,” grandmother Kusi replied, sounding equally relieved. “How are you and all the other grandmother