Cape Argus

Former Covid hospital heroes fighting for livelihood­s

- SHAKIRAH THEBUS shakirah.thebus@inl.co.za

ONCE hailed as heroes during the brutal Covid-19 pandemic, Brackengat­e Intermedia­te Care Facility staff say they now feel like “nothing” as more than 200 staff members face terminatio­n of their contracts at the end of the month.

National Public Service Workers Union (NPSWU) members comprising of the facility’s nurses, physiother­apists, social workers, admin staff, cleaning staff, doctors and other specialist­s marched to the Western Cape Legislatur­e yesterday, calling on the provincial Health and Wellness Department to extend the contracts, allowing staff to continue to provide this vital service to patients.

The temporary field hospital was commission­ed at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic to provide extra beds for the healthcare system.

The 336-bed facility opened on July 1, 2020 and in June last year it was converted to a 128-bed transition­al care facility.

Staff were informed at the end of February that their contracts would be terminated effective March 31, 2023. A memorandum of demands handed to Head of Ministry Doug Newman called for the conversion of all fixed-term contracts to permanent contracts, and for the continuati­on of the Brackengat­e Intermedia­te Care Facility.

NPSWU provincial chairperso­n Zolisa Menze said 214 employees stand to be affected.

“What happened is that there was a changed management programme and what they did was actually seek to replace them with people from outside.”

Clinician Dr Mohammed Faried Abdullah joined in solidarity and said the facility takes an enormous load off emergency centre blockages and general wards of its referring hospitals.

During the Covid-19 pandemic, the hospital had 11 referring hospitals and the unit would see 60-70 patients a day.

Since the transition, they’ve been reduced to three referring hospitals – Tygerberg, Karl Bremer, and Eerste River. He said staff were used to working with such numbers, and have been providing transition­al care for more than eight and a half months.

Last week, Metro Health Services decided that it would not continue any admissions and this was done without their prior knowledge, he said.

“Health and Wellness Department spokespers­on Mark van der Heever said the department was currently consulting with staff and organised labour on the service and staffing plan.

“Once completed, we will complete the recruitmen­t and selection processes needed for the new facility.”

Taking to social media, Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo said: “Covid-19 contract staff are/were mostly generalist­s. You will need to mix them with others, hence everyone must reapply when the contract ends.”

 ?? | ARMAND HOUGH African ?? MEDICAL personnel join a protest held by the National Public Service Workers Union (NPSWU) to the Provincial Legislatur­e, calling for the Department of Health to cease its terminatio­n of employment contracts at Brackengat­e Hospital. The temporary field hospital was commission­ed during the pandemic to provide extra beds for Covid-19 patients. News Agency (ANA)
| ARMAND HOUGH African MEDICAL personnel join a protest held by the National Public Service Workers Union (NPSWU) to the Provincial Legislatur­e, calling for the Department of Health to cease its terminatio­n of employment contracts at Brackengat­e Hospital. The temporary field hospital was commission­ed during the pandemic to provide extra beds for Covid-19 patients. News Agency (ANA)

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