Daily Dispatch

PRETORIA STEPS IN, TAKES OVER MENTAL HEALTH IN EC

Health minister appoints administra­tor to set up new directorat­e

- NONSINDISO QWABE

The national government has taken over administra­tion of the Eastern Cape’s mental health directorat­e.

Health minister Aaron Motsoaledi on Monday acted on the health ombudsman’s recommenda­tion to appoint an administra­tor to oversee mental health in the Eastern Cape.

Motsoaledi told the media in Bhisho that Professor Dan Mkize, the new administra­tor, would establish a new directorat­e.

Motsoaledi said health ombud Malegapuru Makgoba had urged correction of all the systemic failures identified in his report into claims of patient mismanagem­ent at Fort Beaufort’s Tower Psychiatri­c Hospital in August.

Mkize is on a six-month renewable contract.

“The recommenda­tion of the ombudsman is that we put the whole directorat­e of mental health under administra­tion, so it is now under administra­tion. [Mkize] is a seasoned and competent clinician and manager in the field of mental health services.”

He said Mkize was the right man to take on the tumultuous task of strengthen­ing mental health systems in the province.

His vast academic and clinical experience in the field as a professor of psychiatry and a psychiatri­st in both private and public sectors qualified him.

Mkize said he was apprehensi­ve but set on changing mental health services in the province. “I will try my best to do the job I’ve been appointed to, but six months is too little for the work needing to be done.”

Makgoba’s findings urge the administra­tor to:

● Ensure the provincial health department corrects systemic failures identified in his report;

● Establish a new directorat­e of mental health and substance abuse as recommende­d by the national mental health policy framework; and

● Oversee the implementa­tion of policies that will deliver mental health services.

Makgoba said: “The EC [Eastern Cape] department of health has many laudable plans on glossy paper. However, there was very little evidence that these plans were implemente­d. There was a huge mismatch, or very poor correlatio­n, between what was planned and said with great passion in PowerPoint presentati­ons, and what was implemente­d in reality.”

Motsoaledi said the recommenda­tions that the ombudsman made were for both Tower Hospital and general psychiatry in the province, and Mkize “will have to oversee them and see that they happen”.

He said Mkize would be based full-time in the province from February after winding up his other commitment­s in KwaZulu-Natal, where he is currently based.

Until then, Mkize would be spending three days of each week in the province in December and January. “This means that whoever was handling the directorat­e of mental health will be reporting directly to him from February. A lot of work has to be done within that period,” Motsoaledi said.

The mental health sector was a ticking time bomb, in South Africa, and globally, he added.

“There is an explosion of mental health [issues] to the extent that ordinary mental health patients are found in general wards in hospitals because of this.”

He said while the Eastern Cape had only 13 psychiatri­sts instead of the required number of 25,“it is doing much better than most provinces.

“The whole country has a shortage of psychiatri­sts.

“There are only 700 in the country.

“Of that number, 525 are in the private sector.

“That leaves 175 in the public sector serving 84% of the population.”

 ??  ?? AARON MOTSOALEDI
AARON MOTSOALEDI

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