The Citizen (Gauteng)

Caring doctor in hot water

REQUEST FOR HEATERS GOES VIRAL: DEPARTMENT COMES DOWN ON HIM

- Alex Matlala – alexm@citizen.co.za

‘It pains me to see our patients sleeping with only one or two blankets in these freezing wards,’ a Limpopo doctor wrote in a heartwarmi­ng plea to the public for 50 heaters – but his disregard for red tape doesn’t sit well with the provincial health department.

Samaritan asking for R15 000 is in hot water over disregard for red tape.

ALimpopo hospital is in such a state of disrepair that a doctor has taken to begging for donations to improve conditions for patients. This act of caring, however, has led to the department coming down on him with threats of disciplina­ry action.

Patients at the WF Knobel Hospital in Ga-Matlala outside Polokwane have to brave icy winter nights sleeping in wards with broken windows, leading doctor LE Rambuwane, working at the hospital to write a letter, urging people to help him raise R15 000 to buy and install 50 heaters in the pediatric wards.

“It is with great sadness and embarrassm­ent having to write this letter to you,” his letter starts. “I serve in a public hospital, which lacks many things, and with very little support from the powers that be...” it continues, before his plea for the public to donate.

He hoped to raise R15 000, which would have been used to buy heaters to be mounted in the pediatric wards. At the moment, he said, the patients were waiting with bated breath for donations from doctors who have pledged R250 each.

“It is absolutely very cold, especially at night and in the morning. This impacts negatively on patients admitted in wards whose windows are broken,” Rambuwane wrote.

“I am not overlookin­g the fact that windows had to be opened for infection control. But it is a known secret that our hospital lacks enough resources. It pains me to the core to see our patients sleeping with only one or two blankets in these freezing wards,” he said.

The department yesterday denied having threatened action against Rambuwane.

“It is a lie that we victimised the doctor based on the plea he made. Our only problem with the letter was that he used a department­al stamp and letterhead to articulate his concerns,” said department­al spokespers­on Thabiso Tefo – despite the letter having been signed off by both the senior clinical manager and acting CEO. Another spokespers­on, Neil Shikwamban­a, also backtracke­d on his earlier claims regarding the matter, saying: “I admit that I said there would be disciplina­ry action taken against anyone who is found contraveni­ng the department policy.

“I said this on one of the commercial radio stations in Limpopo, soon after the matter hit the public space. But I meant anyone and not specifical­ly this doctor,” he said.

The situation at WF Knobel highlights the extent of collapse of health services in Limpopo. Last week, Limpopo woke up to the news that patients at the Polokwane Provincial Hospital were fed rotten food.

Patients at the Kgapane Hospital in the Greater Letaba municipali­ty also recently complained that nurses at the hospital would chat on social media, while they waited in queues for hours.

Last week, Limpopo health MEC Phophi Ramathuba visited the Mokopane and the Kgapane Hospital on a fact-finding mission, and claimed urgent interventi­on was needed in many of the province’s hospitals.

“As for WF Knobel Hospital, I have instructed senior officials from the district and the province to assist in procuring the much-needed blankets and other supplies for the patients at the hospital,” she said.

“I have also instructed them to make sure that critical repairs are done at the hospital in no time.”

Shikwamban­a said the department has decided not to institute any disciplina­ry action.

“The matter has been investigat­ed by the MEC herself, together with other managers, and she believes the only remedy to address the problem is to provide leadership at the hospital,” he said.

The doctors at the hospital have pledged R250 each

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa