The Star Early Edition

R405m boost to equip Covid-19 health centres

- EDWARD WEST edward.west@inl.co.za

AS THE Covid-19 pandemic intensifie­s, the Solidarity Fund approved an additional R405 million towards the purchase of critical healthcare equipment for the public hospital system in the virus hot spots of Gauteng, Western Cape and Eastern Cape.

Working with the national Department of Health and provincial officials, the fund had approved funding for equipment including more hospital beds, ventilator­s and high-flow oxygen devices, a statement said.

Seeded with R150m from the government, the independen­tly operated fund had secured about R3.02bn in pledges by July 9 from corporates and individual­s to help the country deal with the Covid-19 pandemic.

The latest response from the fund was in line with projected demand for health services, based on epidemiolo­gical modelling of the impact of the pandemic in each of the provinces.

The predicted demand was for more than 100 000 general ward beds and over 26 000 critical care beds at the peak of the pandemic in the country. For Gauteng, the fund approved R209m for medical equipment. The funds would be used to buy high care equipment for hospitals and to equip the field hospital at Nasrec.

In the Western Cape, R120m would go towards more hospital beds as well as high-care Intensive Care Unit (ICU) ventilator­s.

The fund also approved R76m for the Eastern Cape, where there is insufficie­nt general ward and ICU capacity and an urgent need for oxygen devices.

The funds would be used to purchase high-flow oxygen devices, which were more cost-effective than ventilator­s and had been used successful­ly in the province so far.

In addition, the fund approved R250m towards local production of 20 000 non-invasive ventilator­s in support of the National Ventilator Project.

The locally-made ventilator­s were expected to be delivered at the end of next month.

Since its establishm­ent in March, the fund has approved some R2.1bn to fund initiative­s to prevent, support, detect and care for those affected by the pandemic.

* The Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) said late last week it had launched its R150m Covid-19 response programme in the South Africa and SADC region.

“We are providing support to activities that will bolster national and local government capacity to manage the response, save lives and help ensure the South African and SA Developmen­t Community economies will recover after the pandemic,” DBSA chief executive Patrick Dlamini said.

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