Business Day

Placement silence angers intern doctors

- Kgaugelo Masweneng

Frustratio­n is mounting among medical interns still waiting to hear from the department of health about their placements for community service in 2024.

Medical interns need to do the service to complete their medical training. Students speaking on condition of anonymity said they have no idea whether they should start preparing for 2024 as the department has not provided direction.

“We’ve just done two years in a crippled healthcare system, and we are now facing another year in said system, in even more rural places. In a time like December when everyone else is planning their summer holidays, we are working harder than ever in busy hospitals during the festive period.

“At the same time we have been waiting with bated breath to find out where we will be placed next year, likely having to move across country with no social support and limited time to find accommodat­ion, settle in and orientate ourselves,”

The student said they have been pleading with the department of health to inform them of the placements, but some were left out.

“First, many of these people have not been allocated in any of their chosen five hospitals or even any of their three provinces. This means that couples are separated, children are being taken out of schools, and people are being separated from their families and people’s lives upended,” he said.

Though this happens every year, it has been particular­ly chaotic in 2023.

“There have been rumours that this is because the ICSP [internship and community service programme] stopped paying for the system that they used previously. This implies they’re trying to do this all manually.

“If this is the case, this is yet another government department that is failing to provide the service that it has promised. The ICSP has the entire year to plan for this process and yet they are still getting it wrong,” he said.

A Capetonian who moved to Pietermari­tzburg for the internship said if she were told where she would be placed, she would be in a position to make decisions about her life.

“I could make arrangemen­ts and try to sort out my life, but this not knowing, along with the added stress of my dad being sick, is unbearable.

“In September, my dad was diagnosed with multiple myeloma. He’s been in and out of hospital. I was planning to go to Mpumalanga for community service, but since my dad’s diagnosis I decided it would be better to try to be with my family.

“I sent a long email to the ICSP and department of health explaining why I needed to be in Cape Town and their response was that it doesn’t fall within the outlines considerat­ions.”

Her considerat­ions are her personal health (she is pregnant) while her other child is in school, and the living arrangemen­t with her partner, she said.

“I’ve been sitting worrying that I’ve been placed in a province far away from my family, far away from my sick father with no social support,” she said.

One medical student said this has been an “excruciati­ngly anxiety-ridden experience. All of us feel so hopeless with no informatio­n as to where we stand next year. There is absolutely no accountabi­lity from the department of health.

“The system they have chosen this year to release placements is absolutely unacceptab­le and so many of us are still in the dark about our futures.

“We are being expected to call every co-ordinator in every province to find out if we are on their list. We are profession­als who work full-time, including overtime calls, so where are we supposed to find the time to do all this?

“We are stuck. We cannot find jobs for ourselves yet and the department cannot place us or communicat­e with us.”

Dr Angelique Coetzee from the SA Medical Associatio­n said the body is pleading with the department to deal with the placements expeditiou­sly.

“We understand that they have a new online system that is adding a layer to the placement process, but we would urge them to prioritise community service interns.

“It’s a terribly frustratin­g query that comes to us over and over again. We really need to sort it out,” Coetzee said.

The DA has called on health minister Joe Phaahla to “put his money where his mouth is and personally ensure that each and every community service doctor, nurse, physiother­apist, and other personnel are placed on time, with the support they require”.

“These young profession­als are the future of SA healthcare and the department of health needs to either ensure that they are assisted on time, or consider partnering with private institutio­ns to fill the gaps.

“This inept, unprofessi­onal management of the programme must come to an end.”

TimesLIVE sent a query to the department of health. The department chose not to respond to the query sent but instead sent an invitation to a media briefing to outline the state of readiness for the festive season in terms of health services, especially the emergency medical services.

“Other issues to be discussed will include announceme­nts on the placement of medical interns and community service for 2024,” the invitation said.

 ?? /123RF. ?? Uncertain futures:
Medical interns say the department of health has failed to adequately prepare them for their 2024 placements.
/123RF. Uncertain futures: Medical interns say the department of health has failed to adequately prepare them for their 2024 placements.

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