Sunday Times

Traditiona­l healing gets its first ‘hospital’

But law takes a dim view as inyanga opts not to register facility with health authority

- mthethwab@sundaytime­s.co.za By BONGANI MTHETHWA

● Nokuthula Mncwango of Ladysmith could sing the praises of KwaZulu-Natal traditiona­l healer Mxolisi Nkomonde until the cows come home.

The self-employed mother of one became his patient soon after he opened Dr K Traditiona­l Hospital, the first of its kind, in rural Ingwavuma near the border between South Africa and Swaziland in February.

He treated her for swollen feet and gynaecolog­ical complaints.

“I spent four or five days in his hospital and I was taken good care of by his nurses and chefs.

“He did not just feed me umuthi on my arrival, but asked about my medical history first. He also followed up on me after I was discharged. I am now fine and back at work,” said Mncwango.

But the inyanga’s hospital — which boasts 22 beds, male and female wards, three ambulances, four “traditiona­l” nurses and three chefs — may fall foul of the law because it is not registered with the provincial health department.

Provincial health department spokeswoma­n Ncumisa Mafunda said the department had not received an applicatio­n from the facility and no licence had been issued for its operation.

“People who wish to operate a private hospital must apply for a licence. They will be subjected to an inspection for compliance with the requiremen­ts,” said Mafunda.

She added that the department works with traditiona­l healers, some of whom perform a critical role in detecting symptoms of diseases such as TB and HIV in their patients, referring them to more convention­al healthcare facilities.

Nkomonde — who was reported to have said at the hospital’s launch in February that he was in the process of registerin­g it with the department — claimed he did know that he had to do so.

Instead, he said, he decided to register his hospital as a private company with the Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission.

South African Traditiona­l Healers Council president Sazi Mhlongo said the organisati­on was not aware of the hospital.

“In actual fact, there is no hospital which will work without being inspected by the health department, which is responsibl­e for ensuring that it meets the required standards,” he said.

Nkomonde, known as “Dr Mkhulu” by his patients, said he got the idea of opening a traditiona­l hospital two years ago because many people who could have been cured had died in government hospitals.

“There are many things that do not need Western medicine when a person is sick. For example, umeqo or umbhulelo [illness suffered as a result of bad spells cast using one’s footprints].

“That type of thing cannot be cured by a doctor who is trained in Western medicine,” said Nkomonde.

“So that’s why I decided to open a tradi- tional hospital. There are many people who have died in hospitals when they were not supposed to because they were busy with drips and injections when all they needed was just umuthi [traditiona­l herbs].”

Nkomonde said more than 20 patients visited his hospital each day.

“I have asked my patients to make bookings via e-mail but sometimes we end up taking bookings telephonic­ally because some people don’t have access to e-mails,” he added.

Consultati­ons fees range from R250 to R1 500. The latter fee includes hospitalis­ation and also covers food, which is mostly traditiona­l Zulu food such as amadumbe (taro), sweet potatoes, vegetables and meat.

Nkomonde said many of his patients suffered from ulcers, cancer, umhlume (tumours) and the dreaded “cauliflowe­r” — a sexually transmitte­d disease.

“I admit those patients who are really sick. I have traditiona­l nurses who make sure that they take their muthi as required because some people do not take it when they are alone at home.”

He transfers those patients he thinks need Western medicine to the nearby Mosvold Provincial Hospital in Ingwavuma town.

“If I have to transfer a patient I write a letter to that effect and I have ambulances to transfer them to the hospital,” said Nkomonde.

However, Mosvold Hospital’s acting CEO, Dr Bernard Mung’omba, said there was no working arrangemen­t between the hospital and the traditiona­l hospital and the hospital had no record of patients referred to it by Nkomonde.

Nkomonde said he had trained his “traditiona­l” nurses himself through his Amakhos’omhlaba Traditiona­l Associatio­n, which teaches traditiona­l medicine.

The former gospel artist said he had been an inyanga for six years, learning the practice from his late grandmothe­r.

Nkomonde, who has six wives and nine children, owns more than 20 vehicles, including a Range Rover worth more than R1million, a Hummer, two Toyota Fortuners and a two-door BMW. He also owns four properties, in Johannesbu­rg, Pretoria and Mpumalanga.

He also runs a supermarke­t, next to the traditiona­l hospital.

There are many things that do not need Western medicine when a person is sick Mxolisi Nkomonde Traditiona­l healer

 ?? Pictures: Thuli Dlamini ?? Mxolisi ‘Dr Mkhulu’ Nkomonde outside his Dr K Traditiona­l Hospital, above, and in one of the wards, above right.
Pictures: Thuli Dlamini Mxolisi ‘Dr Mkhulu’ Nkomonde outside his Dr K Traditiona­l Hospital, above, and in one of the wards, above right.
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