The Mercury

Least we forget victims of cost-cutting

- Mark Sonderup

SELDOM is one moved emotionall­y when reading a legal document.

But the opening paragraph of the arbitratio­n award by retired Justice Dikgang Moseneke in the case of the deaths of 144 mental health patients evoked strong feelings.

It read: “This is a harrowing account of the death, torture and disappeara­nce of utterly vulnerable mental health users in the care of an admittedly delinquent provincial government. It is the story of the searing and public anguish of the families of the affected mental health users and of the collective shock and pain of many other caring people in our land and elsewhere in the world.”

These inhuman narratives were rehearsed before me.

This represents a scathing indictment of government.

Moseneke was appointed to arbitrate a dispute resolution process after tragic events in 2016 when the Gauteng government health authority cancelled a contract with a hospital group housing mental health patients.

The patients were then sent to illequippe­d and underfunde­d NGOs. Within nine months 144 had died. Another 44 remain unaccounte­d for.

The arbitratio­n hearings were between the Gauteng Department of Health and families of the patients.

The alternativ­e would have been for individual claims or class action suits that would have taken an inexorable amount of time.

It was an unpreceden­ted way of dealing with a health tragedy of this magnitude. But it ensured that the families got redress efficientl­y and quickly – Moseneke took only five months before delivering his final report.

Moseneke ruled that the affected families should each receive R1.2 million. There are two aspects of the arbitratio­n hearings worth examining: the compensati­on amount, and the question of culpabilit­y. This aspect is unique for an arbitratio­n hearing and ventures into the arena normally seen in a medical malpractic­e claim where these two aspects are dealt with separately.

Under the compensati­on set out by the retired justice each family has been awarded about R1.2m. The principle of compensati­on is undisputed as it invariably forms part of a case of (medical) malpractic­e. In this instance the malpractic­e was medically but also socially abhorrent.

Under the circumstan­ces, Moseneke argued that the individual awards were commensura­te with the negligence. On an individual basis the amounts are perhaps not excessive. But considerin­g the number of claims and the total amount to be paid, the monetary value is significan­t.

The second aspect that warrants comment is the question of culpabilit­y. In effect 144 people, perhaps more, died after being entrusted to the care of a provincial health department. Many of the officials responsibl­e, such as the former local government official Qedani Mahlangu, claimed that she could not have foreseen the consequenc­es of this decision. This was wholly rejected by Moseneke.

Culpabilit­y in this instance is made up of two components – profession­al and criminal. Profession­al culpabilit­y warrants full due process by the relevant profession­al bodies such as the Health Profession­s Council of SA and the SA Nursing Council. Why these bodies have been slow to act is inexplicab­le.

Moseneke alluded to criminal culpabilit­y in his judgment, suggesting that the SAPS should investigat­e the matter.

A full record of the proceeding­s has been provided to the police and they should, along with others in the justice system, do their job and provide a docket to the National Prosecutin­g Authority for further action. Importantl­y, government should set aside resources for the justice system to expeditiou­sly conclude its investigat­ions.

What charges? The intriguing question to consider is whether, given the rejection of the lack of foresight argument by several key individual­s in the tragedy, would a charge of murder, dolus eventualis be appropriat­e?

Intent, in the manner of dolus eventualis or legal intention, is considered when, objectivel­y, the perpetrato­r can foresee the possibilit­y of their act causing death, yet they persist regardless of the consequenc­es. This question warrants considerat­ion in court.

If the State fails to hold those responsibl­e for the culpable tragedy, there’s every likelihood it could be repeated.

In one sense, the country has been here before. The death of Steve Bantu Biko in police custody on September 12, 1977 was another case of people, including doctors who examined him after he’d been tortured, failing in their duty. There was no culpabilit­y for the people who should have protected Biko, and did not.

Those entrusted with the care of the vulnerable must understand that there are consequenc­es to actions that cause harm, suffering or death.

Finally, a common theme in the hearings from those who were responsibl­e for what happened was that the plan to end the contract with the hospital and move the patients was executed to “save costs” or because they had pressure from “the auditor-general”.

But there’s a difference between cost-cutting and cost efficiency.

In the country’s current climate of austerity, citizens should remind themselves of these victims of cost-cutting. And practition­ers need to remember that their only responsibi­lity is to the well-being of their patients. – The Conversati­on

Sonderup is Associate Professor and Hepatologi­st, UCT

 ??  ?? Under the compensati­on set out by retired Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke in the Life Esidimeni tragedy arbitratio­n process, each family of victims has been awarded about R1.2 million.
Under the compensati­on set out by retired Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke in the Life Esidimeni tragedy arbitratio­n process, each family of victims has been awarded about R1.2 million.

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