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Half of teachers consider quitting: Stress, admin burden and low pay among top reasons

Half of teachers consider quitting: Stress, admin burden and low pay among top reasons

TimesLIVE02-05-2025

A new nationwide survey has revealed dissatisfaction among teachers, with half saying they are considering leaving the profession within the next 10 years.
The alarming findings come from the Teacher Demographic Dividend (TDD) project conducted in partnership with Stellenbosch University's Research on Socio-Economic Policy unit.
'Results from the online survey reveal half of in-service teachers want to leave the profession in the next 10 years. While it is unlikely so many teachers will leave the profession, given job market constraints, the finding does point to high levels of dissatisfaction among teachers,' the report stated.
The survey found stress and job dissatisfaction are the two leading factors driving discontent.
A staggering 70% of teachers identified excessive administrative work as their main source of stress, followed closely by a lack of work-life balance, mental and physical health concerns and the pressure to meet high academic expectations.
'The main reason cited for wanting to leave the profession was 35% for being overworked, followed by not earning enough at 34%,' the report said.
Alarmingly, 68% of teachers reported teaching does not allow them to have a work-life balance, 32% said it negatively affects their mental health, and 24% said it affects their physical health.

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Understanding foreign body aspiration: a hidden danger for children during Child Protection Month
Understanding foreign body aspiration: a hidden danger for children during Child Protection Month

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Heart transplant duo takes on sani2c
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Daily Maverick

time06-05-2025

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While there is often some lung recovery in the first nine months after treatment completion, for many, the TB-related lung damage remains a problem for the rest of their lives. One solution is to diagnose more people with TB and get them on to treatment more quickly, so that the bug has less time to do damage. Boosting diagnosis of TB is already a health department priority, following evidence that suggests TB could be spread by people who have mild or no symptoms. Of all the people found to have TB in the country's first national TB prevalence survey conducted in 2018, 58% did not report any TB symptoms at the time. What to do When asked what is needed, Allwood stresses that a top priority should be to figure out how best to assess patients after treatment and then designing targeted interventions to address post-TB symptoms. He says the South African government and other funders of health services could be doing more, such as programmatically assessing people at the end of TB treatment. 'We need to know who should be prioritised for ongoing care,' he says. Such screening might include a mix of breathing tests, X-rays, checking for symptoms, and evaluating physical abilities. Allwood also argues that future studies of TB treatments should include ways to measure the long-term effects of the disease. He says all new TB treatment trials should track lung function and compare different treatment options to see which ones help prevent health problems after TB. 'It's a bit like having a stroke intervention trial where the only outcome is dead or alive — and not worrying about impairment!' he says. 'A silent crisis' Professor Norbert Ndjeka, the top TB official in the National Department of Health, describes post TB lung disease as 'a silent crisis'. 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He said children and adolescents should be included in all post-TB disease studies because they were affected for many years after treatment. He said it was important for the World Health Organization to approve clear guidelines for post-TB lung disease and for a global team to define the condition and help guide how countries respond to it. 'Political leadership needs to integrate post TB care into national agendas. We can no longer afford to cure TB but ignore its aftermath. Let's act — through research, policy, and health systems reform — to ensure TB survivors don't just live, but thrive,' he said. Survivor stories Several TB survivors shared their harrowing journeys at the symposium. While working as a dietician at a public hospital in the Eastern Cape in 2012, Ingrid Schoeman got multi-drug-resistant (MDR) TB, which is a form of the disease that is resistant to two of the standard antibiotics used to treat TB. 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