The Herald (South Africa)

Closure of Sanca in PE leaves huge hole

Centre offering services to addicts folds after subsidies slashed

- Estelle Ellis ellise@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

Port Elizabeth’s oldest and biggest organisati­on offering free rehabilita­tion services to drug and alcohol addicts has closed down.

This comes after subsidies to the South African National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (Sanca ) were slashed by 15% by the Department of Social Developmen­t last year.

The department and the National Lottery Distributi­on Trust Fund are the two main sources of income for Sanca.

According to the Medical Research Council, Sanca had since January 2013 treated the bulk of drug- and alcohol-addicted patients who could not afford a private facility in Port Elizabeth.

In Port Elizabeth, 78% of rehabilita­tion services are funded through medical aids and 2% by self-paying patients. The other 20% are funded by state, family, employers and friends.

According to the latest District Health Barometer, only 20% of people living in Nelson Mandela Bay had medical aid coverage.

Sanca’s national office spokeswoma­n, Clara Monnakgotl­a, confirmed the closure. “We will continue to help through the national office and refer people to [Social Developmen­t] for interventi­on as well as our treatment centre in East London,” she said.

In 2016, Sanca was identified as an important organisati­on in the provincial drug plan and was one of the organisati­ons that benefited from a R9million overall investment into drug rehabilita­tion centres by premier Phumulo Masualle.

However, it ran into financial trouble in June last year and was evicted from its Newton Park premises. It closed down a few months later.

At the time of the closure, Sanca was helping patients as young as seven and accepting five new patients a day.

Social worker Pamela Rubushe, who assists addicted pregnant women, moms with new babies, and children, said they were really struggling.

“We are referring to the Ernst Malgas Centre [the stateowned rehabilita­tion facility in New Brighton for teenagers] and also to Shepherds Field in St Albans and Welbedacht in Walmer,” she said.

The DA’s spokesman on social developmen­t, Kobus Botha, said the portfolio committee had never been informed of this closure.

“This uncaring act of these officials must be investigat­ed and I will demand that from the portfolio committee chairperso­n and the new MEC, Dr Pumza Dyantyi.

“People seeking help are now deprived of a well-establishe­d and experience­d organisati­on rendering specialist services,” he said.

According to statistics collected by the South African Community Epidemiolo­gy Network on Drug Use, the average age of drug and alcohol abusers in the province is 33.

Alcohol, dagga and tik remain the most-used illegal substances in Port Elizabeth.

In the past year there was an increase in people seeking help with alcohol abuse.

Social Developmen­t spokesman Mzukisi Solani said he had not yet received a response on the issue from the head of department, Ntombi Baart.

This uncaring act of these officials must be investigat­ed and I will demand [this]

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