The Mercury

Knives out for Motsoaledi

- Lindile Sifile and Sibongile Mashaba

A PRESSURE group has joined growing calls for Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi’s head in a fierce fight thought to be linked to the looming introducti­on of National Health Insurance (NHI).

The onslaught on Motsoaledi is coming from a pressure group of profession­al health practition­ers and academics.

The 99 individual­s in a list seen by The Mercury’s sister newspaper The Star are calling for a review of the newly approved NHI.

But Motsoaledi has hit back, saying the opposition to NHI and calls for his dismissal were being orchestrat­ed by medical aids, which didn’t want it to be implemente­d.

In a nine-page document, the pressure group blasted the public health management and NHI presentati­on, which Motsoaledi made to the cabinet last week where it was given the green light.

Motsoaledi was expected to make NHI’s contents public last week, but is now set to hold a media briefing this week.

Health spokespers­on Foster Mohale said it would be difficult to comment on the document before the briefing.

Mohale urged the group to wait for Motsoaledi to unpack the NHI Bill and participat­e in public comments.

Dr Amilcar Juggernath, a member of the group, said they had collective concerns about the poor state of public healthcare.

“We are a collective who wanted to collaborat­e in the fight for better healthcare,” he said.

In the document, the group argued that the creation of NHI was unclear. It was “unresearch­ed” and merely there to address the current crisis with no future plans.

“The most striking observatio­n is that the government has lost control of the NHI narrative and will have to adopt a new approach to regain that control. It is now also common cause that implementa­tion of NHI has been characteri­sed by a lack of transparen­cy, equivocal National Treasury support and, paradoxica­lly, a deteriorat­ing public service,” the document states.

The group said it was in support of universal health coverage (UHC), which it believed would have been cost effective and easily accessible to all compared to NHI.

Their call includes the formation of an inter-sectoral cabinet committee to manage the provincial and municipal health budgets, administra­tion and service delivery in public healthcare.

The hard-hitting document has been perceived as bordering on a drastic call to put Motsoaledi’s Health Ministry under administra­tion.

The document comes after Motsoaledi’s presentati­on to the SACP central executive committee on June 2, which claimed that billions of rand were being channelled to private healthcare companies at the expense of the poor.

Motsoaledi’s document also accused private hospital groups of squeezing an independen­t group of hospitals, formed by township doctors from the mid-1990s to 2006, out of business through rigorous commercial­isation.

The independen­t group had more than 50% of the beds in the private sector in the early 1990s, but this had shrunk to 12.3% by 2006.

Motsoaledi claimed the shrinkage had forced many doctors to abandon their practices to find work in the private and public sectors.

Motsoaledi also came under intense pressure last week when Health Ombudsman Professor Malegapuru Makgoba and the Committee of Medical Deans warned that the public healthcare system was facing a possible collapse.

 ??  ?? DR AARON MOTSOALEDI
DR AARON MOTSOALEDI

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa