The Citizen (Gauteng)

Tackle sick health before new NHI

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SA’s national department of health is seriously sick when workers refuse to go to their offices because, they claim, the building is in such a bad state of disrepair it endangers their lives. Yet, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi claims the safety issues at the Civitas building in Pretoria have been exaggerate­d. He says he and his senior managers report to work every day – his office is on the 28th floor – and that while there are “problems” with the building these “can be corrected”.

That may be so, minister, but we believe your people have a point. Civitas has been rated as only 20% compliant with the stipulatio­ns of the Occupation­al Health and Safety Act. That is even lower than the score of the Bank of Lisbon building in Johannesbu­rg – which houses provincial government department­s. And that latter building caught fire earlier this month, causing the deaths of three firefighte­rs.

While the habitabili­ty of the building is the responsibi­lity of the department of public works (which appears to be sleeping on the job), Motsoaledi has been aware of this problem for months and cannot try – as he has done – to blame dissatisfa­ction among workers on unionist agitation and intimidati­on.

In the meantime, the work at the national department of health has been seriously compromise­d. Permits are not being granted for anything – from drugs to new clinics. In the end, it is ordinary South Africans who are suffering.

But what is most worrying about this, is that this is the place from where Motsoaledi and his bureaucrac­ts are planning to implement the National Health Insurance (NHI) project, which has attracted widespread criticism from the private health sector.

If the minister is incapable of promoting good health for his own workers, what chance do the rest of us have?

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