The Citizen (KZN)

Throwing their bones out of cot

TRADITIONA­L HEALERS: EXCLUDED FROM NHI SCHEME

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

The group wants all forms of treatment to be included in health Bill.

The government-initiated National Health Insurance (NHI) has been lauded as a great developmen­t towards achieving equitable healthcare, particular­ly for the poor, but traditiona­l healers believe they have been marginalis­ed from the new dispensati­on.

This emerged from the public hearings undertaken by the portfolio committee on health countrywid­e to get input on the NHI Bill.

The healers said the Bill, which aimed to achieve universal access to quality healthcare services in accordance with section 27 of the constituti­on, did not include their services.

Traditiona­l healers in Mpumalanga expressed their concern to the committee during its visit to Thembisile Hani and Nkomazi local municipali­ties this weekend.

Committee chairperso­n Dr Sibongisen­i Dhlomo said the traditiona­l healers told the committee that the Bill was a progressiv­e move, but they claimed the government had ignored their role as traditiona­l leaders, despite the fact that people were dying in hospitals.

They were concerned that the services of traditiona­l healers were being sidelined.

Dhlomo, a medical doctor and former health MEC in KwaZulu-Natal, said the traditiona­l healers suggested that for the Bill to be successful, it should be inclusive of all forms of treatment.

This included indigenous medication­s as there were traditiona­l communitie­s that believed in using these, they said.

The broader community warned against spending money on implementi­ng the NHI at the expense of essential services like infrastruc­ture, water and sanitation.

They said that inasmuch as they were looking forward to the implementa­tion of NHI, government must ensure that other services did not falter.

Dhlomo assured the people that all their views and questions would be thoroughly considered after the hearings, when the committee would be dealing with the Bill in parliament.

The committee began taking written submission­s last month. The closing date was set for November 29.

The committee moved to Gert Sibande district municipali­ty for more hearings yesterday.

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