Sunday Times

Contact tracers put in the hard yards to keep SA on top of virus

- By PHILANI NOMBEMBE

● Foot-slogging, endless hours on the phone and heartbreak­ing conversati­ons have become part of daily life for thousands of contact tracers in the five months since Covid-19 took hold in SA.

“A few people have not been co-operating,” Western Cape contract tracer Raymond Mhobo said this week.

“I expected that people would adhere to the regulation­s that were set by government but people just kept moving around, visiting each other. Children played in the streets without wearing masks.”

Compliance has gradually improved, but the job has other difficulti­es, said Mhobo, who works in Robertson, McGregor, Ashton, Bonnievale and Montagu.

“It’s difficult to tell people who have tested positive that they should not move around in the community, not visit family and friends and not go to the shops.”

A typical day begins with attempts, by telephone, to trace people who have been in contact with new Covid-19 patients.

“Those who we don’t reach telephonic­ally, we visit at home,” said Mhobo.

“We deliver food parcels to positive clients. We screen people who are close contacts as well as screening employees at businesses. We do loud-hailing in communitie­s and Covid-19 awareness in collaborat­ion with government department­s like the police and the department­s of education and social developmen­t. We have also done roadblocks.”

Farhaana Ebrahim, a physiother­apist at Victoria Hospital in Wynberg, Cape Town, became a Covid-19 case manager in April after being “screened as high risk due to diabetes and being asthmatic, as well as my risk of exposure as a physiother­apist”.

“Coming into this job was slightly daunting at first, mainly because we all

Being a case manager requires you to be able to think on your feet Farhaana Ebrahim Covid-19 case manager

knew very little about the Covid-19 outbreak and how it would affect the country,” she said.

“I started off as a case manager responsibl­e for calling cases and doing contact tracing. As time passed my job descriptio­n has changed and I was trained in doing lots more.

“As case managers, our role is to get the patients’ relevant demographi­c informatio­n, assess whether they have received the results of their Covid-19 test, [check] any relevant comorbidit­ies or symptom progressio­n, assess their living situation, inquire or refer the case to an isolation facility, and calculate deisolatio­n dates based on the case’s clinical stability.”

Ebrahim said that not having the Covid-19 contacts’ correct details was one of the main problems, alongside language barriers.

“Being a case manager requires you to be able to think on your feet, to be able to advise patients on possible solutions based on their home environmen­t and personal situations. No two cases are the same,” she said.

“Some cases have been really heartbreak­ing and others made me feel proud to have been able to assist in their road to recovery.”

 ??  ?? Contact tracer Raymond Mhobo.
Contact tracer Raymond Mhobo.

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