Cape Times

Hospital staff woes exposed

- Sandiso Phaliso

THE death of Khayelitsh­a resident Tamara Fuzane – after allegedly being assaulted by staff at the Khayelitsh­a District Hospital three years ago – has prompted Parliament’s select committee on petitions and executive undertakin­gs to conduct an unannounce­d visit at the facility.

Her mother, Nobuntu, told the Cape Times her ordeal began in 2011 when Tamara went for surgery at Groote Schuur Hospital.

Wheelchair-bound Tamara had a pre-existing condition in 2011 which had required brain surgery. She was placed in a general ward instead of the intensive-care unit and had been discharged without Nobuntu being provided with enough time to arrange transport or clothing.

Her requests for Tamara to stay at the hospital overnight were denied, said Nobuntu.

She said while Tamara was a patient at the Khayelitsh­a District Hospital, she had sustained marks which suggested they were deliberate­ly inflicted. The hospital had been unable to explain what had happened to her daughter.

Thursday’s visit by the committee revealed staff shortages, firing of senior staff members and patients slumped in chairs almost 24 hours after being admitted.

Nobuntu said she had approached Parliament for interventi­on after her daughter’s case never reached the courts, but was “discussed in boardrooms”.

She said Tamara had a stroke and was admitted at Tygerberg Hospital before being transferre­d to the Khayelitsh­a District Hospital.

“The nurses assaulted her. I was not even allowed to see her. Days later I was asked to identify her at a mortuary and there were no explanatio­ns given. I went to lay charges, but the case never went to court but was discussed in boardroom meetings with the hospital’s CEO. It’s painful to know my child died under those circumstan­ces.

“I have pictures to show the bruises on her body. Someone at the hospital needs to take responsibi­lity for what happened that day,” said Nobuntu.

Parliament­ary Communicat­ion Services’ Felicia Lombard said the committee was yet to table its report on the complaint.

Lombard said staff shortages encountere­d during the visit were related to the “high number of disciplina­ry hearings and firing of senior staff members”.

Lombard said Sister Elizabeth Brock, of the hospital management, had told the committee that in the antenatal clinic, the agency responsibl­e for the sourcing of staff sends a different person on a daily basis, which means they have to supervise and train new staff every day and this caused delays in delivering services.

“The hospital is said to face a severe shortage of beds as patients are assisted according to the severity of their illnesses,” Lombard said.

The hospital’s chief executive, Dr Anwar Kharwa, said it becomes challengin­g over weekends, when the hospital faces a spike in trauma cases relating to violence.

He said the hospital was carrying the burden of patients from surroundin­g areas such as Mfuleni and Mitchells Plain.

Committee chairperso­n Dumisani Ximbi said complainan­ts had told the committee that “people merely come here to die”.

“The hospital is failing the people of Khayelitsh­a.”

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