The Citizen (KZN)

Northern Cape health in state of disarray

CRISIS: STAFF SHORTAGE AT HOSPITALS AND CLINICS

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

Official says vacancies remain unfilled for a number of years.

The Northern Cape is facing a healthcare crisis, as its hospitals and clinics are battling an acute shortage of staff, medicines and ambulances. The majority of the province’s hospitals and clinics are unable to cope with multitudes of patients at overcrowde­d facilities, while the shortage of ambulances exacerbate­d the situation at all the hospitals.

The vacancy rate by profession­als – which includes doctors, nurses, pharmacist­s and physiother­apists - is estimated at between 70 and 75% in the province, with even the new, state-of-theart hospitals in Upington and De Aar running on what some called “skeleton” staff.

The department of health is said to have no money to pay higher salaries so as to attract doctors and nurses from other parts of the country.

Due to the shortage, Mangaliso Robert Sobukwe Hospital (formerly Kimberley Hospital), a referral facility, is unable to cope with the demand for specialist services and had to make transfers for operations and chronic cases to Bloemfonte­in.

A lack of ambulances at the Dr Harry Surtie Hospital in Upington caused delays in the transfer of patients requiring emergency medical care to Kimberley.

One of the ambulances is standing in the parking bay because its licence disk expired and drivers were refusing to drive it. The problem was reported to authoritie­s a long time ago but nothing was done.

An official, who asked to remain anonymous due to fear of reprisal, described the shortage of medical staff as “historical” due to the fact that vacancies remained unfilled for a number of years.

He said many posts have acting staff for between three and four years without permanent appointmen­ts, mainly due to lack of funds and unavailabi­lity of profession­als to come and work in the Northern Cape.

“Some of those acting had refused to carry on in those posts, because the [provincial health] department was not paying them the acting allowances. They are also overworked because of the short staff,” the official said.

DA provincial leader Andrew Louw visited the health centres as part of the DA’s Listening Tour last month.

“During my tour, which is currently taking me through Namaqua and the area around Upington, I saw first hand how our people are being denied access to medical care,” Louw said.

Louw and his delegation experience­d similar lack of ambulances in the rural Namakwalan­d’s Sanddrift and Alexandra Bay. At Port Nolloth clinic, a contractor had abandoned the site and the building is only open for vandalism.

According to Louw, at Dr Harry Surtie Hospital’s serious lack of staff, ranging from clinical to surgical staff, had resulted in only 228 of 327 hospitals beds being used.

Besides low level staff shortage, critical posts such as the CEO and other senior management positions have acting personnel. “Communitie­s are tired of empty promises, tired of poverty and desperate for a change which can ensure access to basic services. By refusing to appoint staff at hospitals, the ANC is underminin­g the delivery of quality health services to our people,” Louw said. DA MPL and spokespers­on for health, Isak Fritz, said the De Aar Hospital was facing a similar crisis. This facility, which recently opened its doors, had only four doctors and ran the risk of becoming another failed project.

The lack of profession­al health workers and funds has even delayed the plan to open a psychiatri­c hospital in Kimberley. Fears are that should it open, a situation similar to Life Esidimeni in Gauteng could easily happen in the Northern Cape.

This facility took more than a decade to complete, and overran it’s budget by more than a billion rand. Last year it was reported that the funding shortfall for the daily operation of the facility could amount to at least R240 million. –

The ANC is underminin­g our people

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