The Citizen (KZN)

Gauteng health on deathbed

Nurses and doctors are the hardest hit and with many foreign nationals coming to the province to settle, the free public healthcare system continues to take a knock.

- Brian Sokutu

Standard of care in public hospitals and clinics is being compromise­d. A s President Cyril Ramaphosa officially opens the two-day Presidenti­al Health Summit in Boksburg, Gauteng today, the national department of health is conceding that the massive, countrywid­e staff shortage constitute­s a crisis.

Commenting on the work overload on staff at Tembisa Hospital, which has an alarming 441 vacancies, department spokespers­on Popo Maja said Tembisa was a microcosm of the state of the public health sector throughout South Africa, with Gauteng taking most of the strain.

There are 1 853 posts at the hospital and only 1 412 are currently filled.

The hospital should have 310 doctors, but there are only 283. Instead of 1 400 nurses, there are 1 013. Four psychologi­sts are available instead of six, there are 10 occupation­al therapists instead of 15, 25 radiograph­ers instead of 35 and 12 physiother­apists instead of 16.

The biggest shortages are nursing staff, with 387 vacant posts, and doctors with 27 posts unfilled.

Both these categories of health profession­als were the backbone of hospitals that prevented the system from collapsing, according to member of parliament and Democratic Alliance deputy chief whip Michael Waters.

He added: “This appalling situation cannot continue as not only is the quality of healthcare compromise­d, but the staff have heavier workloads.

“This may be a short-term solution, but it will lead to more staff being booked off for stress and exhaustion.

“I will be asking questions in parliament with regard to the filling of all the vacant posts as residents cannot be subjected to compromise­d standards of healthcare.”

Maja said the slashing of the national health budget in the 2018-19 to 2020-21 medium-term expenditur­e framework by R9 billion was at the core of the national public health crisis.

“It is a decision that the government and the country need to revisit.

“The time has come for the country to realise that health is an investment and not a liability.

“Contributi­ng to a healthy population means contributi­ng to a productive economy.

“The staff shortage is not unique to Tembisa, it’s countrywid­e. The Gauteng public health sector, which is bigger than that on the whole continent, today feels the pressure more than any other province.

“There are more health needs than our human resource can deal with.”

He said that the over four million people who lived on antiretrov­iral (ARVs) drugs placed an additional strain on understaff­ed public health facilities.

“The introducti­on of the HIV treatment, which is available to the public, is a big programme which cannot be matched with the current available human resources.

“Nurses and doctors are overworked because there is a disparity between the increasing number of patients and the decreasing number of staff expected to render the necessary services.”

With many foreign nationals, especially from Africa, having settled in South Africa, pressure was mounting on the country’s free public healthcare system.

“Our public clinics and hospitals offer free healthcare to all, which puts them and the staff under immense pressure,” Maja said. – brians@citizen.co.za Additional reporting by Kempton Express

It’s a decision the government needs to revisit

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