Business Day

Provinces must release data on Covid-19 — DA

- Tamar Kahn Science & Health Writer kahnt@businessli­ve.co.za

The DA is putting pressure on provincial health department­s to release more details about their Covid-19 testing and confirmed cases, saying credible and consistent data is vital for guiding interventi­ons.

Gauteng and the Western Cape release daily figures of testing numbers, confirmed cases and fatalities, but the other provinces do not.

The DA’s health spokespers­on, Siviwe Gwarube, said on Monday the party planned to submit Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act applicatio­ns to provincial health department­s in a bid to compel them to release detailed Covid-19 statistics.

The national health department requires provincial health department­s to submit detailed Covid-19 data to it every day, and this should be made public as it is an important tool for holding the government to account, said Gwarube.

“There seems to be a desire in some provinces to withhold data from the public for no reason at all. As an example of this absurdity, the KwaZulu-Natal provincial government is claiming that these statistics are embargoed,” she said.

“Informatio­n about a global pandemic that is wreaking havoc in our country should never be considered classified. That goes against section 32(1)(a) of the constituti­on, which determines that everyone has a right of access to any informatio­n held by the state,” she said.

“I have raised the issue of uniformity of data with the minister of health, Dr Zweli Mkhize, so that we can understand how many tests are conducted per province and what proportion of the national testing figures does this represent.

“I have also made the case for transparen­cy with regards to provincial testing strategies so that we can be assured that each province is testing enough people in relation to their population,” she said.

The DA-led Western Cape had been transparen­t with its testing data and strategy, unlike the Eastern Cape, which had failed to disclose its figures and had effectivel­y hidden its low testing rate from public scrutiny, said Gwarube.

The health department’s acting director-general Anban Pillay said it requested epidemiolo­gical data from provinces on a regular basis, but the department was not determinin­g what they made public.

“Provinces are at liberty to share informatio­n they need to with stakeholde­rs,” he said.

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