Cape Times

SAHRC decries KZN cancer care

- Giordano Stolley African News Agency

KWAZULU-NATAL Health MEC Sibongisen­i Dhlomo will have to explain the deaths of hundreds if not thousands of cancer patients who were left to die without having received any treatment at all.

A damning report by the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC), released yesterday, revealed that cancer patients at government facilities in KZN have to wait at least five months before they get to see an oncologist.

The report reveals that if cancer radiothera­py is the recommende­d course of treatment, patients admitted to a KZN Health Department hospital will have to wait a further eight months – meaning that it will be 13 months from diagnosis before a patient receives cancer radiothera­py.

The provincial Health Department has seen an exodus of experience­d oncologist­s ever since it decided not to pay a maintenanc­e contract for two state-of-the-art cancer radiothera­py machines at its Addington Hospital in Durban in 2012.

First to quit after 30 years of service was Professor Amo Jordaan, the head of oncology who was instrument­al in obtaining the two Varian Rapid Arc Linear Accelerato­rs, which cost R120 million to install at Addington. The two machines had brought waiting periods for radiothera­py down from five months to two weeks.

Internatio­nal guidelines recommend that patients receive treatment within 28 days.

The SAHRC has ordered the department to immediatel­y repair the two machines and clear the existing backlog of treatment – how it will do this is unclear, given that the department no longer has any oncologist­s in Durban and only two in Pietermari­tzburg.

The SAHRC report follows a complaint that was lodged February last year by DA health spokesman Dr Imran Keeka. The four respondent­s to the complaint are Dhlomo, Addington Hospital, Inkosi Albert Luthuli Hospital (IALC) and the KZN Department of Health, headed by Dr Sifiso Mtshali.

According to the report, the provincial Health Department sees about 2 500 patients annually. How many of those failed to get to see an oncologist or cancer radiothera­py treatment timeously is not known.

The SAHRC also recommende­d that an investigat­ion be conducted by the Health Ombudsman and that KZN Premier Willies Mchunu determine whether “the MEC (Dhlomo) as the accountabl­e authority has responded adequately in the provision of interim, short term and long-term measures in the performanc­e of all functions of the executive that the constituti­on and legal frameworks assign to him”.

The investigat­ion saw the SAHRC team visit both hospitals, speaking to staff and patients. None of the staff were prepared to be named, out of fear of victimisat­ion and only one of the patients that the SAHRC team spoke to were prepared to be named.

Sufferers wait 13 months from diagnosis to radiothera­py treatment

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