The Herald (South Africa)

Infrastruc­ture issues on agenda for health MEC

● Plans afoot to refurbish several clinics and hospitals

- Nomazima Nkosi nkosino@theherald.co.za

The Eastern Cape health department is planning to tackle its infrastruc­ture problems by refurbishi­ng key institutio­ns in the province.

This was said by health MEC Sindiswa Gomba during her policy speech, in which she also conceded that the Covid-19 pandemic had exposed major challenges facing the department.

She said old and neglected infrastruc­ture would be attended to, and acknowledg­ed that the department would miss some of the deadlines it had set for the first quarter of the 2020/2021 financial year as a result of having to respond to the Covid-19 crisis.

“We have ensured that the alteration­s and refurbishm­ents we did responded to the longheld view that our facilities are dilapidate­d.

“However, our interventi­ons as a result of the disaster do not exonerate our responsibi­lity to look into others as well.

“Our focus was based on developing the response strategy and setting up such systems that will be sustainabl­e for a much longer period,” Gomba said.

The department of public works has spent more than R50m on the refurbishm­ent of hospitals in the province since the pandemic hit the Eastern Cape in March.

Gomba said the dilapidate­d infrastruc­ture had remained the elephant in the room.

She announced that planned projects for the medium-term expenditur­e framework included:

● Rebuilding collapsed sections of Lady Grey Hospital;

● A new clinic in Cebe village, near Centane;

● Building of clinics in Xhora Mouth and Rabula Village; and

● Increased space at the Motherwell, Kwazakhele and New Brighton clinics.

During her speech in Bhisho, she also announced some of the department’s efforts in fighting Covid-19, including increasing staff.

“As we speak, our province is sitting in third position with a total of 2,459 cases and 53 deaths, with 1,036 recoveries and counting.

“The human resource to fight this pandemic necessitat­ed an appointmen­t of 822 nurses contracted for a year and placement of 20 Cuban doctors throughout the province,” she said.

Meanwhile, DA MPL Bobby Stevenson tabled a motion in the legislatur­e — which was accepted — to use disaster management volunteers to assist with implementi­ng social distancing in what he called “queues of death”.

Stevenson said the motion followed pictures showing people squashed together in queues to collect either grants or food parcels.

Health superinten­dent-general Dr Thobile Mbengashe had identified Sassa offices in Nelson Mandela Bay as one of four drivers of Covid-19 infections in the city.

Stevenson said: “These queues can potentiall­y become super-spreaders of the Covid19 virus and end up becoming queues of death.

“I requested that the department of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs [Cogta] engage with municipali­ties in regard to the recruitmen­t and appointmen­t of disaster risk management volunteers, so that lives may be saved in the Eastern Cape.

“Municipali­ties are empowered to use disaster management volunteers in terms of chapter 7 of the Disaster Risk Management Act.

“These disaster risk management volunteers should be able to explain, engage, and encourage social distancing in the various queues that one finds throughout the province,” Stevenson said.

 ?? Picture: JUDY NGOLOYI ?? ON THE BACK FOOT: Eastern Cape health MEC Sindiswa Gomba says the Covid-19 pandemic had exposed major challenges faced by her department
Picture: JUDY NGOLOYI ON THE BACK FOOT: Eastern Cape health MEC Sindiswa Gomba says the Covid-19 pandemic had exposed major challenges faced by her department

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