logo
Ombud Report: Two dead, one bedridden after shocking neglect at Northern Cape mental hospitals

Ombud Report: Two dead, one bedridden after shocking neglect at Northern Cape mental hospitals

IOL News4 days ago
Health Ombud says patients died needlessly at Northern Cape hospitals due to non-functional equipment, poor leadership, and year-long power outages that left vulnerable psychiatric patients exposed, unmonitored, and untreated.
The Health Ombud, Professor Taole Mokoena, has released the findings of a critical investigation into the treatment, complications, and deaths of psychiatric patients at the Northern Cape Mental Health Hospital (NCMHH) and the Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe Hospital (RMSH).
The investigation, launched following a complaint by Minister of Health Dr Aaron Motsoaledi in October 2024, found that the general care provided at the two institutions was 'substandard,' with two patients dying and another left bedridden following brain surgery.
The incidents, which occurred in July and August 2024, were investigated in terms of Section 81A (11) of the National Health Amendment Act, 2013. The report revealed gross mismanagement, failure to provide urgent medical care, lack of functional equipment, and extreme infrastructural deficiencies.
Mokoena said, 'The investigation concluded that the general care provided at the Northern Cape Mental Health Hospital and the Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe Hospital to the patients was substandard, and patients were not attended to in a manner consistent with the nature and severity of their health condition, as required by Regulation 5 (1) of the Norms and Standards Regulations Applicable to Different Categories of Health Establishments, 2018.'
One of the patients, Cyprian Mohoto, was transferred from NCMHH to RMSH on July 13, 2024, with a suspected abdominal obstruction.
Tests showed he had pneumonia, which went untreated for three days until his death. The report found: 'His deteriorating clinical status was never attended to by either the nursing personnel or the doctors.'
Mohoto died on July 16, 2024, in the Emergency Centre at RMSH.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

National Health Minister calls for a shift in tobacco perception
National Health Minister calls for a shift in tobacco perception

The Star

time3 hours ago

  • The Star

National Health Minister calls for a shift in tobacco perception

The fight against tobacco is on, according to National Health Minister Doctor Aaron Motsoaledi. Speaking at the KwaZulu-Natal Doctors Healthcare 29th Annual Medical Conference in Durban recently, Motsoaledi said it was time governments viewed tobacco as a health issue and not an economic one, as ultimately it did more harm than good. He offered a global perspective, pointing to countries that had made strides in combating infectious diseases while failing to curb non-communicable diseases like cancer, diabetes, and heart disease. During his address to medical specialists, the minister said they all would concur that even at university exams, when one didn't know the answer to what the causes of a particular condition were, if they wrote down smoking, they had a chance of being correct and gaining a mark. He said a comprehensive Tobacco Bill would impact chronic condition numbers in South Africa and even lighten the load on our healthcare system as NHI gets underway. The medical conference also recognised outstanding medical professionals. Among the award winners were specialists from Lenmed: Ethekwini Hospital and Heart Centre, who were acknowledged for their TAVI (Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) programme.

Motsoaledi demands answers on hospitals' deadly negligence
Motsoaledi demands answers on hospitals' deadly negligence

The Herald

time3 days ago

  • The Herald

Motsoaledi demands answers on hospitals' deadly negligence

'Now what do we make of this? All doctors and nurses are trained in the same institutions in the country. How come those doctors acted that way?' He said poor leadership led to the tragedy. 'I can guess that they don't even have management meetings, even mortality meetings — because if they did, some of these things would've been picked up. 'I'm particularly disappointed about the RMSH because I was there when the hospital was opened. It was one of the best. In my speech I mentioned that for it to be one of the best, it needed the management to be on their toes all the time. It means that didn't happen. They had facilities that many other hospitals didn't have, so there is a failure of management.' The Northern Cape department of health welcomed the health ombudsman's investigation report and committed to improving patient care. 'The department recognises the critical importance of mental health services and the vulnerability of psychiatric patients,' spokesperson Lebogang Majaha said. 'We are dedicated to implementing necessary improvements to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.' TimesLIVE

Rethinking HIV treatment with tailored solutions for improved patient engagement and outcomes
Rethinking HIV treatment with tailored solutions for improved patient engagement and outcomes

Daily Maverick

time3 days ago

  • Daily Maverick

Rethinking HIV treatment with tailored solutions for improved patient engagement and outcomes

The health department has R622-million extra to prop up South Africa's HIV treatment programme in the wake of foreign aid cuts. But it's only about a fifth of the total gap. We look at how data can help drive decisions to make the most of this lifebuoy. Just over two weeks ago, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi announced that the Treasury had given R622-million of emergency funding to his department to prop up South Africa's HIV treatment programme, with about R590-million for provinces' HIV budgets and R32-million for the chronic medicine distribution system, which allows people to fetch their antiretroviral treatment from pick-up points other than clinics, closer to their homes. This extra budget is just over a fifth of the roughly R2.8-billion funding gap that the health department says the country needed after US President Donald Trump's administration pulled the plug on financial support for HIV in February. (The Pepfar/Aids relief budget for this financial year was just under R8-billion, but the health department calculated that it could fill the void with R2.8-billion if it trimmed extras and ruled out duplicate positions.) So, how to get the best bang for these limited bucks — especially with the health department wanting to get 1.1-million people with HIV on treatment before the end of the year and so reach the United Nations targets for ending Aids as a public health threat by 2030? By getting really serious about giving people more than one way of getting their repeat prescriptions for antiretroviral (ARV) medicine (so-called differentiated service delivery), said Kate Rees, the co-chairperson of the 12th South African Aids Conference to be held later this year, from Kigali last week, where she attended the 13th IAS Conference on HIV Science. At another Kigali session, Lynne Wilkinson, a public health expert working with the health department on public health approaches to help people stay on treatment, said: 'People who interrupt their antiretroviral treatment are increasingly common, but so are people who re-engage, or in other words start their treatment again after having stopped for a short period.' A big part of South Africa's problem in getting 95% of people who know they have HIV on ARVs (the second target of the UN's 95-95-95 set of cascading goals) is that people — sometimes repeatedly — stop and restart treatment. For the UN goals to be reached, South Africa needs to have 95% of people diagnosed with HIV on treatment. Right now, the health department says, we stand at 79%. But the way many health facilities are run makes the system too rigid to accommodate real life stop-and-start behaviour, says Rees. This not only means that extra time and money are spent every time someone seemingly drops out of line and then comes back in, but also makes people unwilling to get back on board because the process is so inconvenient and unwelcoming. Rees and Wilkinson were the co-authors of a study published in the Journal of the International Aids Society in 2024, whose results helped the health department update the steps health workers should follow when someone has missed an appointment for picking up their medicine or getting a health check-up — and could possibly have stopped treatment. 'We often have excellent guidelines in place, built on solid scientific evidence,' says Rees, 'but they're not necessarily implemented well on the ground.' To make sure we track the second 95 of the UN goals accurately, we need a health system that acknowledges people will come late to collect their treatment and sometimes miss appointments. This doesn't necessarily mean they've stopped their treatment; rather that how they take and collect their treatment changes over time. 'The standard ways in which the public health system works mostly doesn't provide the type of support these patients need, as the resources required to provide such support is not available,' says Yogan Pillay, the health department's former deputy director-general for HIV and now the head of HIV delivery at the Gates Foundation. 'But with AI-supported digital health solutions and the high penetration of mobile phones, such support now can — and should — be provided at low cost and without the need to hire additional human resources.' We dived into the numbers to see what the study showed — and what they can teach us about making the system for HIV treatment more flexible. Does late equal stopped? Not necessarily. Data from three health facilities in Johannesburg that the researchers tracked showed that of the 2,342 people who came back to care after missing a clinic appointment for collection medication or a health check, 72% — almost three-quarters — showed up within 28 days of the planned date. In fact, most (65%) weren't more than two weeks late. Of those who showed up at their clinic more than four weeks after they were due, 13% made it within 90 days (12 weeks). Only one in 14 people in the study came back later than this, a period by which the health department would have recorded them as having fallen out of care. (Some incomplete records meant the researchers could not work out by how much 8% of the sample had missed their appointment date.) The data for the study was collected in the second half of 2022, and at the time national guidelines said that a medicine parcel not collected within two weeks of the scheduled appointment had to be sent back to the depot. 'But it's important to distinguish between showing up late and interrupting treatment,' notes Rees. Just because someone was late for their appointment doesn't necessarily mean they stopped taking their medication. Many people in the study said they either still had pills on hand or managed to get some, despite not showing up for their scheduled collection. Pepfar definitions say that a window of up to 28 days (that is, four weeks) can be tolerated for late ARV pick-ups. Pepfar is the US HIV programme that funds projects in countries like South Africa, but most of them were cut in February. Research has also shown that for many people who have been on treatment for a long time already, viral loads (how much HIV they have in their blood) start to pass 1,000 copies/mL — the point at which someone could start being infectious again — about 28 days after treatment has truly stopped. Sending back a parcel of uncollected medicine after just two weeks — as was the case at the time of the study — would therefore add an unnecessary administration load and cost into the system. (Current health department guidelines, updated since the study and in part because of the results, say that a medicine pick-up point can hold on to someone's medicine for four weeks after their scheduled appointment.) Does late equal unwell? Not always. In fact, seven out of 10 people who collected their next batch of medication four weeks or more late had no worrying signs, such as possible symptoms of tuberculosis, high blood pressure, weight loss or a low CD4 cell count, when checked by a health worker. (A low CD4 count means that someone's immune system has become weaker, which is usually a sign of the virus replicating in their body.) Moreover, given the large number of people without worrying health signs in the group for whom data was available, it's possible that many of those in the group with incomplete data were well too. When the researchers looked at the patients' last viral load results on file (some more than 12 months ago at the time of returning to the clinic), 71% had fewer than 1,000 copies/mL in their blood. A viral count of fewer than 1,000 copies/mL tells a health worker that the medicine is keeping most of the virus from replicating. It is usually a sign of someone being diligent about taking their pills and managing their condition well. Yet clinic staff often assume that people who collect their medicine late are not good at taking their pills regularly, and so they get routed to extra counselling about staying on the programme. 'Most people don't need more adherence counselling; they need more convenience,' says Rees. Offering services that aren't necessary because of an inflexible process wastes resources, she says — something a system under pressure can ill afford. Rees says: 'With funding in crisis, we really have to prioritise [where money is spent].' Does late equal indifferent? Rarely. Close to three-quarters of people who turned up four weeks or more after their scheduled medicine collection date said they had missed their appointment because of travelling, work commitments or family obligations. Only about a quarter of the sample missed their appointment because they forgot, misplaced their clinic card or for some other reason that would suggest they weren't managing their condition well. Part of making cost-effective decisions about how to use budgets best is to offer 'differentiated care', meaning that not every patient coming back after a missed appointment is treated the same way, says Rees. Health workers should look at by how much the appointment date was missed, as well as a patient's health status to decide what service they need, she says. Giving people who've been managing their condition well enough medicine to last them six months at a time can go a long way, Wilkinson told Bhekisisa's Health Beat team in July. 'Getting 180 pills in one go reduces the number of clinic visits [only twice a year], which eases the workload on staff. But it also helps patients to stay on their treatment by cutting down on their transport costs and time off work,' Wilkinson said. Zambia, Malawi, Lesotho and Namibia have all rolled out six-month dispensing — and have already reached the UN's target of having 95% of people on medicine at a virally suppressed level. According to the health department, South Africa will start rolling out six-month dispensing in August. 'But not everyone wants this,' said Wilkinson, pointing out that experiences from other countries showed that 50 to 60% of people choose six-monthly pick-ups. It speaks to tailoring service delivery to patients' needs, says Rees, rather than enforcing a one-size-fits-all system when more than one size is needed. Says Rees: 'Facing funding constraints, we really need tailored service delivery to keep the [HIV treatment] programme where it is.' DM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store