The Citizen (Gauteng)

Provinces get 86% of health budget

MINISTER MUST HOLD DEPARTMENT­S TO ACCOUNT

- Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za

Phaahla gives last push for MPs to support new NHI Bill, with R1.5bn for pilots.

Health Minister Dr Joe Phaahla yesterday tabled a R64.5 billion budget for financial year 2022/23 – 86% (R55 billion) of which would be transferre­d to provinces as conditiona­l grants – prompting an expert to call on him to ensure department­s are held to account.

Failure by provinces to manage the grants could lead to consistenc­y in the implementa­tion framework not being achieved, according to Rural Health Advocacy Project director Russell Rensburg.

Delivering his maiden virtual budget vote speech before MPs – two years into the Covid pandemic – Phaahla said government has administer­ed 35 182 million vaccine doses to just over 19 717 million adults, or 49.5% of all adults.

The department, said Phaahla, has been allocated R2 billion to procure vaccines in the 2022/23 financial year.

“While the virus is [still] among us, the best defence is vaccinatio­n,” said Phaahla.

Despite the health budget declining by 1.7% each year before factoring in inflation, Phaahla was bullish in announcing measures to strengthen health delivery, which included:

Urging MPs to support the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill to attain universal health coverage for all South Africans.

Setting aside an amount of R1.5 billion to be managed by the health department – supporting various infrastruc­ture projects in NHI pilot districts – with contracts already issued for the Siloam Hospital in Limpopo and the Zithulele and Bambisanan­i district hospitals, both in the Eastern Cape’s OR Tambo district.

Issuing contracts towards the constructi­on of a multi-billion-rand Limpopo Academic Hospital.

Provinces sharing

R6.8 billion in direct conditiona­l grants, managed by them under the Health Facilities Revitalisa­tion programme to construct, revitalise and maintain hospitals, clinics and other facilities.

Reacting to the health budget, Rensburg urged Phaahla to hold provinces to account for the financial spending of the grants, totalling R55 billion.

“Historical­ly, those conditions have not been well managed, with money merely transferre­d to provinces. We need new thinking; creating an environmen­t for the recovery of strategic healthcare services,” said Rensburg.

“All those grants to provinces have conditions and if we don’t manage the conditions, we won’t achieve consistenc­y in implementa­tion.

“Provinces are the main implemento­rs of healthcare and decisions they make have an impact on how healthcare services are shared.”

Rensburg added that the minister had the power to provide that leadership through the implementa­tion framework and a concurrent responsibi­lity between national and provincial department­s.

“With strategic programmes like district services grants – funding HIV/Aids and the community outreach – there is a big opportunit­y for the department to show leadership and coordinate the implementa­tion of those programmes,” he said.

Sasha Stevenson, head of the Health Rights Programme at Section 27, said there has been a significan­t decrease in the health budget, which Phaahla has acknowledg­ed – “something quite fatal, because we cannot achieve health outcomes”.

Stevenson said health facilities were short-staffed – affecting the quality of service to patients. “No increase in compensati­on of employees means we can’t improve standards and access to services with insufficie­nt staff,” she said.

“The employment of more community health workers is positive, because they play a significan­t role in providing homebased primary health services. We are also seeing a lack of a scale-up in mental healthcare services, which includes lack of infrastruc­ture.”

Historical­ly, it has not been well managed

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