Sowetan

Family shocked at having to pay hospital bill for release of sister’s corpse

‘Healthcare in SA free for the poor’

- By Noxolo Sibiya

A family were left confused when Philadelph­ia Hospital in Limpopo required they pay more than R4,000 to release the corpse of their loved one.

The Mahlangu family from Siyabuswa, Mpumalanga, said their diabetic sister Lettie was admitted at the hospital in June after her sugar levels dropped.

The 43-year-old domestic worker died on June 6 but management would not release her body unless the family settled the R4,626 bill.

“We were shocked when we heard that we had to pay. What I know is that healthcare in South Africa is free for the disadvanta­ged, so why are we paying,” said her brother Koos.

He said the hospital claimed that the payment was for a bill his sister had accumulate­d over the years while receiving treatment there.

His sister, who did part-time domestic work, had been a regular at the hospital since 2015 when she was diagnosed with diabetes, during which she was never required to pay, according to the brother.

“She was admitted four times during then and now – the first time in 2015, twice in 2019 and then two weeks ago when she wasn’t well.

“This is where she regularly collected her diabetes medication as well and at no point was she ever asked to pay.

“I also questioned why they hadn’t billed her every time she came to the hospital, I got no answer. They only told us that they couldn’t disclose the bill to us every time we brought her in because they can’t disclose a patient’s debt.”

The family had to raise funds and ask for favours from friends for nearly five hours to pay the bill.

Provincial health spokespers­on Neil Shikwamban­a said citizens are expected to pay for services they receive at public hospitals except for pregnant women, children under the age of six, women terminatin­g pregnancy and people with mental disorders, as well as all services received in a primary healthcare facility.

“Though a person cannot be denied access to treatment due to lack of money, the services are paid for and patients do make arrangemen­ts to pay at a later stage if it happens that they consult without the required amounts,” he said.

Shikwamban­a said patients are profiled based on how much they earn and from there a determinat­ion is made on which services they need to pay for and how much.

He denied that the hospital would not release the body until they had made the payment. “The hospital also notified the family that in case they are unable to settle the amount, they have an option to approach social workers to profile the family and confirm the family is unable to pay. The Mahlangu family opted for the first option, which was to pay the bill.”

 ?? /THULANI MBELE ?? Philadelph­ia Hospital in Dennilton, Limpopo.
/THULANI MBELE Philadelph­ia Hospital in Dennilton, Limpopo.

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