Daily Dispatch

Give rape survivor centres highest priority

- Tlamelo Mothudi Tlamelo M Mothudi is a health researcher at the Public Service Accountabi­lity Monitor (PSAM).

One Sunday early in August I woke to news that a young woman in Makhanda was reported to have survived a rape.

The survivor, numb with the trauma that had been forced upon her body, was taken to Settlers Hospital in Makhanda at 4am for medical assistance and to have a rape kit administer­ed. Upon arrival at the hospital, a rape kit was not administer­ed because there was only one doctor on call, who was seeing to two babies in critical condition, and the young woman was not considered an emergency.

She sat in the hospital waiting area from 4am until 12noon until another doctor administer­ed the rape kit. After being at the hospital for 10 hours, she finally left, at 2.15pm. During this time, she received no psychologi­cal counsellin­g.

On July 2 2019, Health MEC Sindisiwe Gomba presented the Eastern Cape Department of Health (ECDoH) 2019-20 Budget and Policy Speech. This speech followed President Cyril Ramaphosa’s signing of the declaratio­n against Gender-Based Violence (GBV) and femicide in November 2018 in which he stated that SA is facing a crisis and that rape, abuse and sexual assault are rampant. In her speech, Health MEC Gomba outlined that the government would take immediate steps to improve the state of hospitals and clinics in the province.

Where is the sense of urgency? In 1998, the National Department of Health’s (NDoH) uniform national guidelines for dealing with survivors of rape and other sexual offences, were operationa­l.

These guidelines sought to create an integrated and coordinate­d process to provide for the psychologi­cal and physical care of the survivor and to enable the collection of medicolega­l evidence for the successful prosecutio­n of the perpetrato­r in the criminal justice system.

The guidelines emphasised that “Services should be available on a 24-hour basis with minimal delays in victim/survivor being seen for the following reasons:

– Rape victims should be forwarded to the front of a health queue – though confidenti­ality should be maintained;

– For forensic reasons, medical evidence needs to be captured as quickly as possible;

– The victim should be allowed to wash after the examinatio­n; and

– The medical/psychologi­cal problems should be dealt with quickly.

These guidelines were superseded by the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007 (the Act). The Act recognises that sexual violence in SA is a grave concern. The Act was a response to the realisatio­n that the statutory and common law did not adequately deal with the commission and adjudicati­on of sexual violence in SA.

While the Act changed many things and provided survivors of sexual violence with various services, it failed to retain the same levels of priority treatment and assessment described in the 1998 guidelines. Without guidelines that clearly emphasise the importance of survivors being treated with dignity, respect and especially prioritisa­tion, there is likely to be an increase in incidences of survivors of sexual assaults waiting hours before they are assisted.

It also impacts negatively upon the collection of evidence needed to support a criminal investigat­ion.

In November 2017, John Jeffrey, then Deputy Minister of the Department of Justice and Constituti­onal Developmen­t, emphasised at the National Forum on the Implementa­tion of the Sexual Offences Act that laws are only as good as the people who implement them.

He noted that different people play different roles at various stages in the process where a survivor goes forward to report a sexual assault and all the roleplayer­s are crucial.

Makhanda is home to 82,000 people, it has a 32.5% unemployme­nt rate. Bearing these statistics in mind, one can imagine the extent of poverty and reliance of the community on public healthcare services.

With the closest Thuthuzela care centre (a one-stop rape care facility) located in Port Elizabeth, the Makhanda community rely heavily on the only hospital in town, Settlers Hospital, for emergency healthcare services, especially for rape cases but currently, the hospital is understaff­ed. Anecdotal accounts indicate a shortage of doctors at this hospital, which has resulted in patients not being deemed “emergencie­s” in the hierarchy of emergency cases, and then having to wait hours for medical assistance.

On July 22 an e-mail communicat­ion sent to Rhodes University from Settlers Hospital outlined that after hours (between 4pm-7am), during weekends and public holidays, there is only one (1) medical practition­er (doctor) working.

The ECDoH must conduct an urgent investigat­ion into the current state of Settlers Hospital and others like it with a particular focus on the shortage of healthcare personnel.

The South African Constituti­on recognises that everyone is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and benefit of the law.

Everyone has inherent dignity and the right to have his or her dignity respected and protected; and that everyone has the right to bodily and psychologi­cal integrity!

One must wonder, in the circumstan­ces, how many rape survivors, who have turned to EC Health facilities after hours, have walked away without assistance, after having waited for hours to see someone.

– Makhanda needs a Thuthuzela centre. The ECDoH must work with the National Prosecutin­g Authority to ensure one is set up.

– Public/donor funding and/or funding from the National Department of Health (NDoH) is needed to fund Thuthuzela centres.

– Until a Thuthuzela centre is set up in Makhanda, the ECDoH must ensure healthcare facilities treat rape survivors with the same respect and dignity they would receive at a Thuthuzela centre.

– The ECDoH must urgently deal with the shortage of doctors at Settlers Hospital.

– The ECDoH must ensure rape survivors are treated as priority patients at all healthcare facilities in EC.

– The NDoH national guidelines for dealing with survivors of rape and other sexual offences must be revisited with a view to establishi­ng protocols to be followed.

Once establishe­d, the National Policy Framework for the Management of Sexual Offences matters must be amended to incorporat­e them.

ECDoH must work with the NPA to ensure a rape care centre is set up

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