The Citizen (Gauteng)

Access to health is human right

FAIRNESS: NHI IS RESPONSE TO GLOBAL CALL

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Quality healthcare shouldn’t be something monopolise­d by the rich. Lelona Mxesibe

Conversati­ons surroundin­g access to quality healthcare are currently dominated by high-level policy discussion­s in relation to the national health insurance (NHI).

These discussion­s are often far removed from community-driven commitment­s to creating more equitable realities, a richness of which exist on the ground.

Access to healthcare is a human right in South Africa. This encompasse­s individual health and the overall well-being of communitie­s. Universal health coverage (UHC) forms part of an intergover­nmental agreement by states to promote healthy lives and to ensure the well-being of all people.

The World Health Organisati­on’s UHC2030 aims to ensure that everyone has access to quality healthcare, despite their socioecono­mic status, by 2030. The NHI is our response to this global call for universal health coverage.

In South Africa, the most unequal country in world, safe and quality healthcare shouldn’t be something monopolise­d by the rich, and lower-income families shouldn’t be pushed deeper into poverty, while trying to access their right to health services.

While some might argue that there are other more pressing sectors, other than health, that our government could prioritise, like addressing problems in our education system, it is important to realise that health plays an essential role in socioecono­mic developmen­t.

In fact, healthcare can actually be seen as the bedrock for this developmen­t, with access to quality health services being able to, for example, improve school attendance and concentrat­ion.

Even from the perspectiv­e of fiscal austerity, human productivi­ty is improved when people are healthy enough to contribute to their families and the economy.

Healthcare cannot be viewed in isolation; in one way or another, it forms the basis for the realisatio­n of a wide variety of socioecono­mic rights, which is why the NHI is a much-needed step in the right direction.

Referring to the implementa­tion of the NHI, former minister of health Aaron Motsoaledi said: “The first five years will be a process of building and preparatio­n. Our first job is to uplift the public health sector so that it is in a proper state for the NHI.”

This uplifting, as well as the debate surroundin­g the NHI, should be informed by examples of real communitie­s and people who have been working for years to make primary healthcare more accessible.

One example on the ground is that of the Chiawelo Community Health Centre in Soweto.

Taking a holistic, rather than simply symptomati­c, approach to primary healthcare, this community practice boasts a wide range of services, such as a 24-hour emergency facility, a pharmacy, a mother-and-child area, HIV and TB counsellin­g, community psychiatry, and dental health.

Invested community members, who trained to become community health workers, have committed themselves to registerin­g people for healthcare and then following up with them. With their help waiting times for primary healthcare are just 22 minutes.

Comprehens­ive healthcare has been made available to over 3 000 registered families – and 79% of cases before the CCP being successful­ly resolved.

Lelona Mxesibe is political and budget analyst at Studies in Poverty and Inequality Institute in Johannesbu­rg.

It has vital role in socioecono­mic developmen­t

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