Maverick Citizen

GAUTENG PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS

Doctors’ SOS as Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital faces essential food shortage

Doctors’ SOS as Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital faces essential food shortage
Healthcare workers outside Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital in Diepkloof, Soweto, on 10 March 2022. (Photo: Shiraaz Mohamed)

Gauteng’s biggest hospital, Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital (CHBAH) is facing serious food shortages that are impacting on patients’ health and well-being. A breakdown in certain food supplies is forcing doctors and nurses to scramble to make a plan about how to feed patients. Once again, the root of the problem appears to lie in maladministration at the Gauteng Health Department and the failure to pay suppliers on time.

Daily Maverick was first alerted to the problem last week, when a departmental head contacted us to complain: “So once again there is a food crises at Bara – suppliers weren’t paid, also no soap and hand towels and as a result infections spreading 😡.”

The health worker, who asked not to be named, told us that this is a long-standing problem that “has now reached crisis point because companies are refusing to deliver because of non-payment. The problem is that companies are awarded tenders to supply a number of different products so, for example, if not paid for eggs they refuse to deliver milk.”

Read more in Daily Maverick: Doctors bring lunch for hungry patients as Chris Hani Baragwanath hospital reaches ‘crisis point’

She said CHBAH had also apparently been struggling with the supply of dry groceries since January. Part of the problem, she says, is the award of tenders to small contractors who can’t meet the demand.

Explaining what it meant in terms of day-to-day care the doctor said that “when there was no white meat cheese was purchased.” However, “Now there’s no petty cash, so no cheese!” 

Yesterday, when we contacted the health worker again she told us CHBAH is “dealing with the crisis day-to-day from petty cash which is depleted. Today patients are now having baked bean soup as a protein as the supplier has not been paid! It’s really unacceptable that our patients are going through this.”

We contacted another senior health worker in the hospital to verify these claims. 

She confirmed them and, while also asking not to be named, told us that “it is a province-wide problem involving non-payment of suppliers. Hence the non-delivery of perishable groceries. Kitchens from different hospitals are borrowing food items from each other in order to feed patients.”

In this case CHBAH is borrowing food from South Rand Hospital in Rosettenville and Bheki Mlangeni District Hospital, also in Soweto. 

“It has been a problem for the past two weeks mainly affecting protein. The same problems are being experienced with drugs and dry stores,” she said.

The doctor claims that the Chief Financial Officer at the GDoH central office is not signing off on supplier payments: “I don’t think he understands the implications of his actions for patient care. It limits the scope of patients’ diets and quantities per meal.”

The doctor added that due to a financial crisis in the department there are also “major acute infrastructure issues in critical areas not being attended to, leading to closure of beds and cancellations of elective surgery.”

The doctor said that “most hospitals are quiet because of intimidation. Only CHBAH has flagged these problems with the GDoH’s Acting HOD and the MEC, Nomantu Nkomo-Ralehoko, but no solutions have been brought forward yet.”

Yesterday, doctors at Charlotte Maxeke and Helen Joseph hospitals said they were not aware of problems. 

Finally she warned that there is a possibility of medical waste removal stopping “with effect from tomorrow” due to non-payment.

As basic hospital infrastructure gets neglected the indignity being faced by health workers and patients extends to the effects of access to water and sanitation. Another health worker told us about “the sewer stench in our outpatients section at CHBAH that patients and staff have to deal with daily” and that there are no she-bins in bathrooms for staff to discard their sanitary pads.

These reports should embarrass Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi who, on assuming office in October 2022 gave a speech in which he said that: “We are serious about health. Hospitals must not be the way they are now. We are starting with [fixing] the hospitals in the townships, as part of our broader township development agenda. We want to see a 360-degree change.” 

Justifying the appointment of an MEC with skills in financial management (but not in health) he said that “This must be the department that pays service providers within 30 days. If you don’t pay, you don’t get services; if you don’t get services people don’t get quality.” 

Motalatale Modiba, spokesperson for the Gauteng Department of Health, said:

“There has not been a shortage of essential food in the past two weeks.

“There has been an intention by the supplier to withhold the supply of protein food items (such chicken and fish) due to payments beyond Christ Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital that needed to be cleared. The challenge had to do with the end of financial year closure and delays in the reloading of budget commitments for processing.

“As things stand all meals have been provided to date including special meals.

“The supplier for protein food items as indicated above has been engaged and has committed to continue delivering as per their contractural obligation.” DM/MC  

Gallery

Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Pet Bug says:

    How would a NHI improve on this?

    • John Millar says:

      Depends how one looks at it, but for those pushing for its implementation, more possibilities to loot

    • Kobus Loubser says:

      Well if you follow Gauteng Premier Lesufi’s stated turnaround strategy….. oops sorry, if you have a 360 degree turnaround, you will pass 359 degrees of possible change and end up doing exactly what was done before, so nada, no change, no improvement is expected or delivered.

      • greigdoveygd says:

        I don’t think that Lesufi had any instruction in trigonometry at school hence he doesn’t know what it means when he says “360 degree turnaround”, The actual term is “doing an about-turn” which is in essence 180 degrees…

      • Johann Olivier says:

        I think, for at least once, Lesufi was completely honest – and factual. LOL.

    • Confucious Says says:

      There is absolutely zero prospect of any improvement in anything to do with medical services and health care with the NHI.

    • Confucious Says says:

      A full 360 Deg??? Somebody didn’t finish their studies….

    • Tee Mo says:

      Well, it would take the budget away from the province. But there is no guarantee that the national department would be any better at this. Watching this space for the expose on how all the money for food was spent on skinny jeans that were never delivered.

  • Penelope Meyer says:

    Aaand once again, the corruption eats away at what once was. It seems we have reached a tipping point where the bloodsuckers have now depleted the blood supply. I don’t get it, did you never think beyond today, beyond the mindless robbery, beyond the get-rich-quick scheme? Did you think the golden goose would lay forever even as you starved her?

  • Graeme J says:

    “We want to see a 360-degree change.” [Lesufi]

    Yes. That’s right. Do a 360 degree change and you will be back where your started!

  • Andrew Blaine says:

    With a 360 degree change nothing will happen and the course to disaster will be maintained! Absolutely typical?

  • Jane Crankshaw says:

    Mismanagement is the cause of chaos and racist BEE policies are the cause of Mismanagement. Employ the right people in the first place, no matter the colour of their skin, but based on experience, knowledge and education, and there will be no chaos!

  • johanw773 says:

    So a committee will probably be appointed to investigate the source of the problem, which can be pointed out by a blindfolded ten year old. One cannot laugh at this anymore, it just provokes anger.

  • Hester Dobat says:

    No mention of corruption, theft, or any dodgy deals but just a bit of maladministration, bunggling and incompetance. So easy to fix Mr Lesufi! After all it is not anywhere near our Eskom crises. It is just an unfortunate end of year issue. The patients and staff are going to be blessed with the wand that sprinkle things with fairy dust very soon. I hope some of that magic stuff also falls on other state hospitals. We need some positive things to happen Mr Lesufi. SA is worn out and should if you (the public) should land in state hospital, remember to take food, water, bedding, hand sanitizer, and you know some plastic shopping bags for our very personal stuff (you know what I mean ladies) because there is a bit of a financial hiccup at hospitals.

  • jcdville stormers says:

    We are a failed state, civil society is keeping us going

  • thomasklerck1 says:

    360 degree change…… so we will continue on this heading then???

  • Hermann Funk says:

    What do we expect? This is a province that promotes the MEC for education under whose “leadership” hundreds of millions of Rand were wasted in “defogging” schemes to become Premier.

  • jeff katz says:

    A pity that constructive comments fall on deaf ears and have zero impact. What an abysmal mess, and to imagine that these over self aggrandised authorities really believe they can rectify what has been totally destroyed, beyond heart wrenching !!!!

  • David Pennington says:

    Lets all just do the Hokey Kokey

  • Bill Gild says:

    Day by day, month by month, and year by year, it becomes increasingly apparent that the ANC simply cannot govern.
    How far we are from a completely failed state is unknowable, but the outlook appears dire – and nigh.

  • Rory Short says:

    The ANC is congenitally incapable of organising anything bar theft.

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