Daily Maverick

Yes, we CAN: how a doctor is pulling people together to help

Leanne Brady believes in the power of the collective to help in a crisis. By

- Biénne Huisman

Leanne Brady wears a staggering array of hats. A public sector doctor, health policy researcher and documentar­y filmmaker, she is also considered the driving force behind Cape Town Together – which spawned Gauteng Together and Eastern Cape Together, collective­s of “Community Action Networks” (or CANs) that propped up much of South Africa during the darkest hours of hard lockdown.

Speaking to DM168 over Zoom from her home in Salt River in Cape Town, Brady is quick to deflect such credit.

“So I pulled a team together,” she says. “The way we talk about it, we try to avoid terms like ‘pioneers’ or ‘founders’ because it was such a collective effort. It was small teams initially organised in all of our neighbourh­oods, which then became these broader networks.

“Because of my position, located in the health department, and because of my previous experience in pandemics and my experience in activism work in Cape Town, I was really lucky to know so many great people. So for me, it feels important to frame it like that, you know?”

Cape Town Together’s Facebook page, which has 19,100 members, describes the initiative as “something beautiful, experiment­al, and growing”.

It adds: “We are a network of self-organising neighbourh­ood-based groups taking action, and responding in unique and diverse ways to Covid-19 and beyond. Examples include community kitchens, theatre, care packs for the homeless, mask-making, blanket and winter clothes drives, and so much more.”

It also conveys reassuranc­e, should matters appear somewhat chaotic: “The kind of decentrali­sed, horizontal structure of this network is unfamiliar to most people and can be confusing to those of us used to typical bureaucrac­ies and corporate organising, so don’t worry if things seem strange and chaotic at first.”

It was Brady’s lessons learned at Connaught Hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone, where she worked as part of the country’s 2015 Ebola response, that informed her community-based reaction to Covid-19 in South Africa. Brady was a public doctor in Sierra Leone for six months, in which time there were 27,609 suspected cases of Ebola, and 11,261 deaths.

“My work in Sierra Leone was largely hospital- and clinic-based, with the kinds of community engagement we did mostly insufficie­nt,” she says. “So in many ways, in my Covid response, I tried to learn from the mistakes of not engaging communitie­s more broadly. I think many health systems are still grappling with how to support community-led responses.”

Despite Ebola’s devastatio­n, the “galvanisin­g force” of crisis remains etched in Brady’s mind. This she relishes about the Covid-19 epidemic, too.

Recalling her time at Connaught Hospital, she says: “I did not consider it traumatic. It was a really wonderful experience because I worked in an incredible team and with the ministry of health; I learned so much and, actually, I almost stayed.

“There is something about these acute crisis moments. It really brings people together; sort of in the same way Covid has done, now. And in that manner, it becomes a very positive experience. In a crisis moment, there is this sense of collective purpose, a galvanisin­g force.”

The hat Brady feels most comfortabl­e wearing is that of “public health systems activist”. She is a researcher at the Western Cape Department of Health’s Emergency Medical Services, while completing a doctorate in “collective action catalysed by the health system” at the University of Cape Town. One of Brady’s PhD case studies is paramedic safety in so-called “red zones”, areas classified as having high levels of violence, with ambulance crews having to wait for police escorts before entering to care for the very sick.

As a government employee, Brady wants to change the health system from within.

“It’s quite easy to feel like the department is a monolith and that it’s failing us, but there are a lot of good people,” she says.

Apart from her medical qualificat­ions (a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degree from the University of Pretoria, and a Master’s degree in Public Health from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine), and clinical experience ranging from treating Ebola patients to training in cataract surgery in Swaziland, Brady’s arsenal includes art: documentar­y filmmaking, photograph­y and poetry, through which she reflects on the humanity of healthcare.

She explains: “What became clear to me was that what we learnt at medical school

We are a network of self-organising neighbourh­oodbased groups taking action, and responding in unique and diverse ways to Covid-19 and

beyond

was insufficie­nt to deal with the complex social issues impacting health systems.

“A lot of what we are taught at medical school is obviously focused around clinical care, but so much of what makes people sick, or makes people healthy, has to do with more social and political determinan­ts of health.

Her creative work helps her understand some of these complex issues, “and to work with them to open up conversati­ons”.

Her 11-minute documentar­y film Red Zone Paramedics follows an ambulance crew working the night shift on New Year’s Eve in Mitchells Plain. Made in 2018, it is used to promote safety for paramedics.

One of the paramedics says goodbye to his wife “as if he might not come home”, says Brady. “It’s a real problem because access to emergency care is constituti­onally mandated. But delivering care to some of these areas is very, very difficult.”

The story-telling “humanises the emergency personnel, showing the complexity of the violence”, Brady says.

She says she is excited that CANs will continue to be useful, even in a post-Covid-19 world: “There are also some CANs in Limpopo now, and elsewhere. Anything can be a CAN, right? Any sort of group of people in a neighbourh­ood organising around an issue could call themselves a CAN.”

In Cape Town, some CANs responded to fires at the University of Cape Town, in Gugulethu and in Hout Bay.

“The relationsh­ips establishe­d as part of the CANs meant they were in a much better place to respond. Relationsh­ips like these in times of crisis are really, really important.”

She credits her community – her neighbours in Salt River – for caring for her during lockdown, while she worked to care for vulnerable people around the Western Cape.

“There’s been a lot of support, especially during the pandemic. My neighbours were bringing me food almost every night. I would come back from a long day at work and Faeeza would be knocking on the door saying: ‘Hey, I made you some dinner’.”

Brady admits to preferring the collective action, spurred by the Covid-19 crisis, to the “slow violence of a health system that feels stuck” she says: “You keep working every day to try and improve [the system]. And it just doesn’t feel like anything’s getting better and everybody feels exhausted and worn out. That’s a much more difficult environmen­t to work in.”

Her demeanour, however, is one of optimism and persistenc­e.

“There’s a lot of good people, really trying to make this health system work.”

 ??  ?? Dr Leanne Brady, a public sector doctor, health policy researcher and documentar­y filmmaker, was the driving force behind Cape Town Together. Photo: Liza van Deventer/Fairlady
Dr Leanne Brady, a public sector doctor, health policy researcher and documentar­y filmmaker, was the driving force behind Cape Town Together. Photo: Liza van Deventer/Fairlady

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