The Citizen (KZN)

More strife in health sector

QUALIFIED HEALTHCARE PERSONNEL CANNOT FIND POSITIONS Limpopo treasury is freezing posts instead of filling vacancies.

- Gcina Ntsaluba – gcinan@citizen.co.za

The South African Medical Associatio­n (Sama) has cautioned against the loss of skilled and qualified doctors to other countries due the national department of health’s inability to provide them with jobs.

Sama board member Dr Rhulani Edward Ngwenya said the loss of these critical skills would prevent the national department of health from reaching its ambitious sustainabl­e developmen­t goals by 2030, which include recruiting, training and retaining healthcare profession­als in order to curb epidemics, like Aids, tuberculos­is and malaria.

“We have an overwhelmi­ng shortage of qualified doctors and nurses, yet we are losing them to foreign countries because they can’t get jobs in public hospitals,” he said.

“If they are trying to reach the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals then they should be [creating] more posts because we simply don’t have enough doctors ...”

Ngwenya said employing doctors and nurses was not the only solution because currently many public hospitals did not have the facilities or equipment to provide quality healthcare to patients.

“It doesn’t help to have a doctor that cannot work because of lack of equipment. Furthermor­e, a surgeon cannot work without anaestheti­c,” he added.

“If we are going to meet the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, we need institutio­ns that can take care of patients efficientl­y,” he said.

In Limpopo last month, for example, the department of health had 586 graduates who had completed community service in fields including medicine, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy and physiother­apy. According to the member of the executive council of health in the province, Dr Phophi Ramathuba, the department could only provide jobs for 142 of them.

“We are left with 444 unemployed healthcare profession­als. Almost 400 are bursary holders, which deepens the contradict­ion because we have sent these profession­als to school to gain skills based on our needs and are unable to appoint them,” she said during a media briefing last week.

A Limpopo doctor told The Citizen the staff shortages were not limited to medical profession­als.

“There are shortages of porters, kitchen staff, drivers and cleaners,” he said

He added that last month the minister of health announced 5 300 posts would be created in South Africa, but the Limpopo treasury refused to approve the majority of those posts.

A report compiled by the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) in May last year, entitled State of Provincial Healthcare System Spotlight on Limpopo, showed critical shortages of human resources, but instead of filling vacant positions, posts were being frozen.

Human resources shortages cause long waiting times, patients being turned away, longer hospital stays, higher risk of deaths and increased pressure on the staff.

This overburden­ing of staff was a major contributo­r to the worsening of attitudes.

The national department of health had failed to comment by time of going press.

400 sent to school to obtain skills based on needs.

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