The Zimbabwe Independent

Migrants in SA have access to healthcare

- The Conversati­on

„ A POLITICAL storm has erupted in South Africa after a video went viral showing the Health minister for the Limpopo province – which borders Zimbabwe — berating a Zimbabwean woman who was seeking healthcare. Responses have been divided. Some have called for Phophi Ramathuba to step down on the grounds that verbally abusing a patient was out of order. Others have supported her, saying she reflects the sentiments of South Africans living in the area. The Conversati­on Africa spoke to Kudakwashe Vanyoro, who has done research on the treatment of migrants in South Africa’s healthcare sector, to unpack the issue.

What does the law say?

According to South Africa’s National Health Act, primary healthcare facilities run by the state must provide free care to everyone, except for people covered by private medical aid schemes.

The country’s Refugee Act of 1998 stipulates that refugees are entitled to the same access to treatment and “basic healthcare services” as citizens in public healthcare facilities. This also applies to undocument­ed migrants who are citizens of any country in the Southern Africa Developmen­t Community. For higher levels of care, refugees and migrants must pass a means test. In some situations, irregular migrants must pay the whole cost of medical services.

These laws reflect the country’s constituti­on. Section 27 states that healthcare is a right that should be afforded to everyone.

In this context, medical xenophobia is a term that scholars use to describe negative attitudes, perception­s and practices of healthcare providers towards non-national patients on the basis of their national origin. Providers include frontline staff like nurses, doctors, clerks and security personnel.

The main idea that informs this discrimina­tion is that the patient is an outsider and therefore “undeservin­g” of care in a public facility. The thinking is that non-nationals are over-burdening the public healthcare system by using resources that are already scarce.

In my view, medical xenophobia is sustained by unfounded myths such as the myth that non-nationals come to South Africa in buses to give birth or to get access to HIV treatment. These attitudes and perception­s translate into exclusiona­ry practices such as denial of treatment or delay in accessing services.

In most instances, language, documentat­ion and referral systems are used as vehicles of this discrimina­tion. Healthcare providers scapegoat non-nationals for being unable to speak the local language, lacking referral letters or being undocument­ed.

How serious is the problem?

It’s a very serious problem. But the experience­s of non-nationals aren’t all the same.

They differ according to geographic context, identity and the kind of treatment a person is seeking.

Take geographic context. Discrimina­tion may be more widespread in metropolit­an spaces like Johannesbu­rg where there’s increased political scapegoati­ng of migrants. In this context health simply becomes an extended site for these tensions.

But it’s different where undocument­ed non-national patients seek to use primary healthcare services in towns on the border of neighbouri­ng countries. Take Musina, the northernmo­st town in South Africa, just a few km away from the border of Zimbabwe. Here non-nationals access healthcare services with relative ease, partly because of cross-border, intergener­ational kinship. This lends a different political meaning to the issue of migration.

The kind of treatment people are seeking also affects the response. Non-nationals with different health conditions have different experience­s and outcomes.

This points to the need to avoid generalisa­tions. It’s important to break down where the pressure points are and how healthcare providers respond. My research shows that not all South African health providers are hostile to all African migrants.

Is the current response misplaced?

South Africa’s public healthcare system is overburden­ed. But this is not because of non-nationals. According to the most reliable statistics they constitute no more than 8% of the total population.

The challenges within the public healthcare system relate to the general shortages of medical personnel, state facilities lacking beds, staff facing high workloads and low morale among nurses in public facilities.

Providing primary healthcare has undoubtedl­y been complicate­d by the post-apartheid era’s shortcomin­gs in the governance of the health system, mismanagem­ent of funds and state resources, corruption and underfundi­ng. A report by civil society group Corruption Watch highlights how corruption prevents a vast section of the population from accessing their right to decent healthcare.

The blame on migrants is therefore misplaced as these are health system management and governance issues. This should not be a debate about individual­s in a country which continues to feel the effects of health inequaliti­es embedded by apartheid.

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