As the new year begins, South African hospitals are struggling as unprecedented numbers of COVID cases in the second wave are pushing resources to the limit. Hospitals are having to cope with the situation even as their own workers are off sick or self-isolating.
Last week, at least one province was reported to have reached out to the army to request additional personnel to help cope with the additional burden. Wester Cape premier Alan Winde said the province was recruiting an additional 1 300 health care workers (HCWs)In a weekly media briefing, KwaZulu-Natal premier Sihle Zikalala stated on Sunday that a total of 8 723 public sector HCWs had been infected with COVID since the start of the pandemic.
“Of the total infected, 98 have sadly succumbed to the disease. The majority of the infected health-care workers are nurses,” he said. HCWs are also struggling with burnout and illness. Experts had long been predicting the impact the second wave would have on South Africa’s already weakened health infrastructure. As of Sunday, 3rd January, there were a total of 167 492 active cases in the country.
Dr Kams Govender, who works west of Durban, said: “What we are experiencing now is just the tremor, the tsunami is yet to come in mid January. It’s hit us hard and it’s going to hit us even harder then. We are physically and emotionally exhausted, and worse, losing our health-care colleagues every single day. But still we push on and show up and pray for better days where there is more light than darkness.”
The hospital at Prince Mshiyeni Memorial Hospital (PMMH) in Umlazi, KZN, was reported to be full and bodies had to be taken to funeral homes within 48 hours.
One nurse at PMMH said, “The hospital is full, the Covid wards are full, the normal wards are full. There are no beds for our outpatients, they lie in the passage on stretchers waiting for beds. The Covid patients will be placed with one another in a consultation room. We try to separate them but it’s not a proper place for patients to be in because there are no beds, just the stretchers. We are running out of oxygen points because there are so many patients that need oxygen. We tend to prioritise who needs it more, but right now everyone needs it.”
Source: Sowetan Live