Need for team to probe KZN health governance
WE ARE saddened to see severe shortages of cancer specialists and poor management of cancer equipment in the three hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal that offer cancer treatment: Inkosi Albert Luthuli Central Hospital, Addington and Grey’s.
We have taken note of the task team that Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has set up to tackle the crisis.
The crisis in the oncology services is a symptom of a deeper crisis of inefficient governance in the health department in KwaZuluNatal.
We therefore ask the health minister to set up another task team as soon as possible to investigate the governance issues in the health department in KwaZulu-Natal that have contributed to the cancer treatment crisis.
The health minister should consider instituting a Section 100 (1)(b) intervention in the health department in KwaZulu-Natal to assist the department to improve the delivery of health services, including oncology services.
The crisis in oncology services in KwaZulu-Natal has been dragging on for too long. As a result, there is high possibility that many lives have been lost as a result of the ineptitude with which the crisis has been handled.
We have therefore asked the Human Rights Commission to investigate and reveal the number of patients diagnosed between January 2015 and June 2017 with stage 1 cancer in various hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal.
The investigation should also reveal how many of them have died while waiting to access the MRI scan and to commence treatment.
If it is proven that, in the past two years, a significant number of cancer patients have indeed died as a result of ineptitude on the part of the health department in KwaZuluNatal in remedying the crisis, those responsible should be identified and held to account. BISHOP ABEL GABUZA SACBC Justice and Peace Commission