Daily Maverick

MKHIZE’S LEGACY

Baby deaths, doctor & nurse shortages, and a collapsed Eastern Cape health system We asked Minister of Health Zweli Mkhize, who is now on special leave, 89 times what he is going to do about health services in the Eastern Cape. The number of times he answ

- By Estelle Ellis

In March 2021, Minister of Health Dr Zweli Mkhize was asked why he had not placed the Eastern Cape Department of Health under administra­tion. Three months later, with at least six newborn babies dead, specialist services for children with cancer collapsing and a dangerousl­y low number of Covid-19 beds available in one metro, neither Mkhize nor his officials have given an answer.

Calls for Mkhize to resign or be fired were instead anchored in his alleged involvemen­t with Digital Vibes, a communicat­ions company appointed by the national Department of Health that is being investigat­ed for allegedly paying money to the Mkhize family.

None of these calls, however, mentions the human rights crisis that was already close to fullblown in March, when Mkhize last visited the Eastern Cape.

 Senior health officials told him in March 2021 that the Eastern Cape Health Department would run out of money by July;

 When health officials sounded the alarm, three babies were dead at Dora Nginza Provincial Hospital in Gqeberha because of hospital-acquired infections in a shockingly overcrowde­d neonatal unit, where one nurse sometimes had to look after 28 babies. Since then another three babies have died in preventabl­e accidents in the ward;

 One of the province’s main Covid-19 hospitals, Livingston­e Hospital in Gqeberha, is only able to provide four ICU beds and does not have enough doctors or money to provide 24-hour medical care to those admitted to the Covid-19 ward;

 The Paediatric Oncology Unit, which is part of Livingston­e Hospital, is facing closure as dire staff shortages make it unsafe for children to be treated there;

 After four years, Livingston­e, one of the province’s main tertiary hospitals, still only had an acting CEO with no permanent appointmen­t being made.

In February, Premier Oscar Mabuyane replaced MEC of Health Sindiswa Gomba with Nomakhosaz­ana Meth.

During high-level presentati­ons to Mkhize, the department highlighte­d the heavy burden of medico-legal claims on its budget and warned that it would run out of operationa­l funds, with the exception of payroll, by July.

The department had already used about 16% of its budget before the financial year had even started in April and still owed service providers around R4-billion. The patient registrati­on system had to be shut down because the service provider that manages it had not been paid.

Earlier this year, Meth admitted that R3.5-billion of the department’s substantia­l payroll was allocated to nonmedical personnel – this in an environmen­t where the heads of clinical units were effectivel­y barred from appointing clinical staff by the provincial cost-containmen­t committee, which is shrouded in mystery and which has refused to make many medical appointmen­ts.

Department spokespeop­le have refused to identify who sits on this committee, how many appointmen­ts it has made and who has oversight over it.

Following the March presentati­on, DM168 asked for an in-person interview with Mkhize. The request was agreed to but then Mkhize’s spokespers­on, Dr Lwazi Manzi, said that the minister “had a car waiting”.

Eventually it was agreed that he would answer questions from DM168 on the state of the Eastern Cape Department of Health in writing.

We asked these questions another 89 times – and have not yet received a single response except for an off-the-record interview with a senior health department official.

The most pressing question of all was: Why has the Eastern Cape Department of Health not been placed under administra­tion?

The provision of health services is a provincial competency, as is the determinat­ion of the provincial health budget, with the exception of grants that are aimed at providing support and creating specialist services in provincial tertiary hospitals. But Section 100 of the Constituti­on allows for a national interventi­on in a provincial administra­tion when “a province cannot or does not fulfil an executive obligation in terms of the Constituti­on”. The Constituti­on provides that the national executive may intervene by taking any appropriat­e steps to ensure the fulfilment of the obligation.

What we have received in response to our questions have been many excuses: The minister is busy with the vaccines, the minister is going on hospital visits and then a more hopeful “The minister is looking at your questions.”

And a not so hopeful: “The minister wants to consult with the director-general first.”

And then nothing.

The Eastern Cape Department of Health or parts of it have been placed under administra­tion before – more than once. Currently, its mental health programme is under administra­tion, although Prof Dan Mkhize, the administra­tor who was appointed following an investigat­ion by health ombudsman Prof Malegapuru Makgoba into mental health services in the province, died last year due to Covid-19 complicati­ons. It does not appear that a replacemen­t has been appointed.

In 2020, following a visit to the province, Mkhize seconded Dr Sibongile Zungu from the national Department of Health to co-ordinate the province’s chaotic Covid-19 strategy. Zungu drew up a report on the state of health facilities in the province that Mabuyane’s office has refused to release, instead saying that a summary made by them was enough.

When Meth was asked if she would consider releasing the report, her answer was: “I will have to study the report and understand the issues raised but the fact that we have already invited our stakeholde­rs to the strategic session illustrate that, we are not shy to talk about any challenges confrontin­g us in the department.”

Zungu managed to redesign a plan for the depleted ambulance service and with NGO assistance, oxygen supply to the province’s hospitals was improved, almost exclusivel­y for Covid-19 cases.

But at the end of August 2020, the then head of the Eastern Cape Health Department, Dr Thobile Mbengashe, resigned from his post to join the Office of the Premier as a consultant. He then appeared to take over the Covid-19 response while Zungu became the acting superinten­dent of the department.

Meanwhile, doctors in the public sector started sounding the alarm that hospitals were running on empty with crippling staff shortages including nurses, doctors and specialist­s in some fields.

The pediatric department­s felt these shortages most acutely due to their high demand for nurses.

Livingston­e Hospital in Gqeberha, housing the specialist units in Nelson Mandela Bay, has not had a permanent CEO since 2017, when Thulane Madonsela and his management team were chased out of the hospital by angry union members.

This week, Meth admitted that both the neonatal unit based at Dora Nginza Provincial Hospital and the Paediatric Oncology Unit based at Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital were facing severe nurse shortages. Both fall under the tertiary Livingston­e Hospital, even though they are not based at Livingston­e Hospital.

“The Neonatal Unit has perenniall­y run at over 100% bed occupancy, and for the past few months [over five months] the number of newborns in the unit has been between 100 and 110 virtually daily. These babies have been admitted into a space for 70 which has obviously led to overcrowdi­ng and increased risk of infection. Indeed there have been outbreaks of infections with multi-antibiotic resistant organisms, which has led to deaths of some babies. Others may have died because they couldn’t be accommodat­ed in the neonatal ICU and Neonatal High Care Unit.

“The nursing staff complement is inadequate for the 70 beds, even worse when it has over 100% occupancy. Space is available to expand the neonatal unit by 24 beds, but their most critical need is for staffing. The department has identified the need for nurses in the neonatal units and is reprioriti­sing funding to fill priority posts which include the neonatal ICU and High Care at Dora Nginza Hospital,” she said.

Answering a question about the severe staff shortages that have led to limited operations in the Paediatric Oncology Unit, Meth said: “The Paediatric Oncology Unit at the PE Provincial section of Livingston­e Tertiary Hospital has had a severe shortage of nurses and furthermor­e lost a number of nurses due to deaths from Covid-19 and cancer, resignatio­ns and retirement. The dire nursing staff shortages are such that the unit will need to close down, as there are very few nurses to keep it functional even at a minimal level. In the short term, Livingston­e Hospital has identified nurses that could be seconded to the Paediatric Oncology Unit. The department will prioritise posts for the current financial year to fill the critical vacancies in the Paediatric Oncology Unit,” she said.

The Covid-19 response, co-ordinated at Livingston­e Hospital, was also severely curtailed due to staff shortages.

The hospital is the designated Covid-19 centre for the entire western part of the province, serving about two million people.

According to a memorandum addressed to the Department of Health, there will be a maximum of four ICU beds available for Covid-19 patients. The memorandum points out that beds will be limited and adds that, due to no money available for overtime, there will not be a full-time doctor on duty after hours in the Covid-19 ward created in the hospital’s basement.

The Eastern Cape has one of the highest death rates in the world, more than 500 per 100,000, but last week provinicia­l health spokespers­on Sizwe Kupelo said a report detailing the causes of these deaths had not been presented to the department yet. The report was commission­ed by the department and drawn up by one of its own doctors.

Hospitals have battled these staff shortages for many years with the provincial cost-containmen­t committee being blamed for delaying appointmen­ts by more than a year in some instances. According to correspond­ence seen by DM168, this committee will, after delaying appointmen­ts for a year, then inform doctors that it is not filling the post as posts are deemed unnecessar­y and unfunded after being vacant for a year.

Last week, Zungu, who has been called back to the national Department of Health, issued a memorandum returning the power to human resources delegation­s at hospitals to make appointmen­ts if such appointmen­ts were approved by the provincial cost-containmen­t committee.

Highly placed sources inside the national department, however, said they were not aware of the operations and authority of this cost-containmen­t committee.

The legacy of the cost-containmen­t committee was felt most acutely this week as hospital sources told of the threats against clinical personnel who refused to admit a child with cancer because it was too dangerous to treat her because of the nursing shortage.

The child was later transferre­d to East London.

On 18 June, the provincial department sent its most senior spin doctor and head of the department of communicat­ions, Siyanda Manana, to restore calm.

Shame - Mkhize’s Legacy

 ?? Photo: Deon Ferreira ?? Dr Zweli Mkhize visited Gqeberha in March and was told that the health department would run out of money by July.
Photo: Deon Ferreira Dr Zweli Mkhize visited Gqeberha in March and was told that the health department would run out of money by July.
 ?? Photos: Shiraaz Mohamed ?? Top: Paramedics deliver a patient to Livingston­e Hospital in Gqeberha.
Above: A health worker carries an envelope containing x-rays while a patient lies in a passage at Dora Nginza Provincial Hospital in Gqeberha.
Photos: Shiraaz Mohamed Top: Paramedics deliver a patient to Livingston­e Hospital in Gqeberha. Above: A health worker carries an envelope containing x-rays while a patient lies in a passage at Dora Nginza Provincial Hospital in Gqeberha.
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