Tag: Eastern Cape

How ‘NHI on Wheels’ is Bringing Life-changing Healthcare to Young People in Rural Eastern Cape

Children lining up to see the dentist at the Ekuphumleni Community Hall, near Whittlesea. (Photo: Sue Segar/Spotlight)

By Sue Segar

The Keready project uses mobile clinics to take healthcare services to rural areas. Sue Segar spent time with the project as they took eye, dental, and other healthcare services to communities in the Eastern Cape.

In the small Eastern Cape town of Bizana, hundreds of children stream into a large hall at the Oliver and Adelaide Tambo Regional Hospital on a brisk Tuesday morning in May. There’s a festive but orderly vibrancy in the air – the scene made all the more colourful by different school uniforms and young voices from tiny six-year-olds to learners in their late teens.

They’ll be assessed, and helped by doctors from Keready – an organisation offering mobile health services in many far-flung communities lacking healthcare services.

For weeks leading up to today, outreach teams from Keready’s mobile clinic operation have gone from school to school, asking teachers to identify children with eye problems. Today they arrived on various forms of transport – some on the back of a bakkie – from deeply rural communities as far as 100 kms away. Most of the children have little access to health services, particularly eye care, so the response is substantial.

I have travelled here with three doctors and an admin assistant from Keready’s East London office. They join other healthcare staff, including from the health department, for this two-day mega outreach in partnership with the Umbono Eye Project.

“Over the past three months, school educators identified 492 learners from 26 schools who have impaired vision,” says Ewan Harris, a pharmacist and consultant by training and a former deputy director-general of education in the Eastern Cape, who heads up Keready’s Eastern Cape team. “We will attend to these learners and if necessary, provide them with prescription spectacles and meds.”

Ntombizedumo Bhekizulu, a teacher at the Mhlabuvelile Senior Primary School at Ludeke Mission, has come with 16 children, “the ones who struggle to see what we write on the chalkboard”.

Bulelwa Mqhayi from Nomathebe Primary School in Isithukutezi adds: “It’s great that they can help these kids. Most of the parents are unemployed and on social grants and don’t have the money to take the kids to specialists. The clinics don’t help us with eye problems.”

The youngsters will also have a range of other health checks and will be sent to see one of the doctors on site if found to be in need of further health assistance. The health department has deployed a mobile dental unit, an audiologist, as well as a medic to provide advice on family planning and reproductive health.

A child being signed in for a health check at Bizana. (Photo: Sue Segar/Spotlight)

Before arriving at the registration desk, the children have already been given deworming tablets and a Vitamin A supplement, provided by the health department, while each group is given a health talk on age-dependent topics ranging from hand hygiene, to TB and HIV.

After handing in their registration and consent forms, the children go through basic vision screening tests by a team of “eye care ambassadors” – young people supported with employment opportunities through the Social Employment Fund, which is managed by the Industrial Development Corporation.

If the school children fail the eye screening test, they are sent to see optometrist Johan van der Merwe.

In between patients, he tells Spotlight he’s already found a number of “low vision candidates” and one who might need to be placed in a special school. “I’ve just done a full refraction on one child … It’s clear that he has a lens defect,” says Van der Merwe. Placing his hand on the head of another small boy, he continues: “This little one has been very quiet … he’s struggling to communicate. He needs thick lenses, or an operation by a specialist.”

Van der Merwe, who has been an optometrist for 22 years, joined the Umbono Eye Project permanently almost two years ago after volunteering his services once a week. “Before I joined, I was working in a mall in East London. I never saw sunlight.” He adds: “It has been very rewarding to make a difference to these children.”

Optometrist Johan van der Merwe assesses a child at Bizana. (Photo: Sue Segar/Spotlight)

At another mobile site, health department dentist, Dr Unathi Mponco, has been busy with youngsters suffering from a range of dental ailments. “There were sore teeth, rotten teeth, mobile teeth, and some children had very swollen gums…. Whatever I can treat on the mobile truck, I deal with here – otherwise if they need X-rays or the cases are more serious, I refer them to the hospital’s dental unit for a comprehensive exam,” she says.

In a mobile van outside the hall, health department medic Siyabonga Chonco has been consulting teenage girls all day offering family planning services. “The Alfred Nzo district has the highest rate of teen pregnancies in the Eastern Cape. We are trying hard to curb teenage pregnancy,” he says.

The teens are invited to ask any questions and to say whether they are sexually active and ready to take contraceptives. Chonco says in almost every case, he senses great relief from the learners to speak to an impartial young person. “They tell me that, at the clinics, the older nurses can be quite harsh…. They open up to me, especially with questions about contraceptives.”

He says broadly, young people are interested in long-term contraceptives. “They don’t want to have to go to clinics all the time.” Some will walk away with a contraceptive implant – a flexible plastic rod about the size of a matchstick that is placed under the skin of the upper arm to prevent pregnancy over three years – while others will choose injectables or pills.

At the end of two days in Bizana, the team has seen nearly 750 youngsters from about 40 schools, with 432 having had their eyes screened and 52 eligible for specs. For six of those children, the spectacles will be life-changing, says Van der Merwe.

Doctors Eileen Kaba and Anda Gxolo consulting with their little patients. (Photo: Sue Segar/Spotlight)

Apart from a few “high” prescriptions that might have to be ordered from overseas, a member of the team will deliver the specs personally to each learner, an occasion which is a highlight for the team. “When we first put the glasses on their faces, you just see smiles. The parents are so thankful. It makes this so worthwhile,” says Van der Merwe.

Keready is working closely with the provincial departments of health and education. The NGO recently received the Eastern Cape’s Batho Pele Award for enhancing healthcare in the province.

“We could never reach all these children as government,” says TD Mafumbatha, mayor of the Winnie Madikizela-Mandela municipality, adding “this is what collaboration looks like”.

But where did it all begin?

Keready, loosely translated as “We are ready”, was set up in February 2022 to encourage young people to vaccinate against COVID-19.

One of the people behind Keready is Harris, a pharmacist and consultant by training and a former deputy director-general of education in the Eastern Cape. Harris was working as a consultant for the Fort Hare Institute of Health, when he was asked to help design the Eastern Cape’s COVID vaccine rollout strategy.

“The COVID programme was a success because, through advanced digitisation, we were able to map the 84 000 communities in South Africa to their nearest schools, clinics and hospitals,” he says.

And it is out of that awareness of the spatial distribution of healthcare needs that Keready was born.

After the COVID programme ended, Harris, as national lead for the project, was tasked with setting up Keready’s offices in  four provinces, including employing provincial leads, and staff as well as doctors and nurses. “Our vision was to give young doctors the opportunity to manage at the highest level, under our guidance.”

Implemented by DG Murray Trust (a South African philanthropic foundation) in partnership with the National Department of Health, Keready is funded by the German government through the KfW Development Bank.

The project reached full scale late last year with 46 mobile health clinics in four provinces:  Eastern Cape (8), Gauteng (16), KwaZulu-Natal (13), and the Western Cape (9).

These mobile clinics move into different communities every day. At times they use a loud-hailer to attract people. Sometimes they are based at schools, other times at taxi ranks and other hubs of activity.

People of all ages who visit the clinics are provided with a range of health services, including screenings and tests for HIV, TB and diabetes, as well as given family planning advice and immunisations. Medication is prescribed, and, where possible, dispensed on the spot.

Keready also runs a WhatsApp line where youth can ask young doctors and nurses any health-related questions and get straightforward, non-judgemental answers.

When learning about Keready during a walkthrough of exhibition stands set up at the Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg during the 2023 Presidential Health Summit, President Cyril Ramaphosa described the movement as “NHI on Wheels” because of its efforts in addressing universal health coverage.

From Bizana to Whittlesea

Two weeks later, I am again travelling with the same Keready team – this time to Whittlesea, outside Queenstown. Over two days, we visit the Ekuphumleni Community Hall and Kopana School in Ntabethemba. A highlight of this outreach is that teenage girls will be supplied with sanitary pads, thanks to a collaboration with pharmaceutical and healthcare company Johnson & Johnson.

On day one, hundreds more pupils than anticipated arrive. School principals were over-enthusiastic in spreading the word of the outreach resulting in taxi-loads of pupils from unexpected schools arriving. Irate teachers try to negotiate a way for their pupils to be seen.

Teacher Nolitha Tuta tells me many of the children she’s brought are from child-headed households and some have had little to no access to healthcare services.

While waiting in the queue, a mother of a child from Bhongolethu Primary School describes how she walked for hours to bring her child for eye testing.

Children line up for their health checks at the Kopana School in Ntabethemba. (Photo: Sue Segar/Spotlight)

Despite having waited until the end of the day, students from Zweledinga High end up being driven back home at sunset without being assisted.

After two days in Whittlesea, nearly 1 200 pupils from 36 schools have arrived. Nine schools were turned away. Nearly 700 learners have been screened for eye conditions, with 88 eligible for specs and four referred to an ophthalmologist.

The doctors look exhausted. Dr Anda Gxolo says over the past two days numerous children presented with ear problems. There were also long lines for dental care this time.

Despite the long hours, Dr Phumelele Sambumbu, who manages five of the eight Keready mobile clinics in the Eastern Cape, says she loves her work. “I come from these parts – from a village between Cofimvaba and Tsomo. My old grandmother is bedridden. I know first-hand how difficult it is to have access to care when you’re from a village like that and when you suffer from ailments like that. The idea of bringing health services to people who would otherwise struggle to access them is what drives me,” she says.

Mapping the need

Based on its relationship with the department of health, Keready has ambitious plans to expand its grassroots outreach programmes to help narrow the gaps in healthcare nationally.

A map on the wall of Keready’s office shows the number of government clinics in the Eastern Cape relative to schools. There are around 700 clinics in the province, but over 5000 schools (which works out to more than seven schools per clinic). Nationally, the ratio is similar with around 3 400 clinics and 25 000 schools.

It’s no surprise then that, according to Harris, staff on Keready’s 46 mobile clinics in the four provinces where it operates cannot keep up with demand for their services.

“Based on our mapping of the national population, we know there are 2 500 communities that don’t have reasonable access to a clinic. Just to deal with the gaps, we need 2 500 mobile clinics. We can tell you exactly where in the country to put them,” says Harris.

To reach ill people who are ill but don’t know it, Keready aims for nurse-supervised ambassadors to do door to door visits in communities to check who has TB, HIV and hypertension. “We have digitised every street and every house by satellite. Each house would be marked off; if TB’s picked up, it is mapped,” says Harris.

Plans for the door to door programme are well under way, he says. “In the Eastern Cape, Keready has partnered with the Small Projects Foundation to train 80 young people [as nurse-supervised ambassadors] from the Industrial Development Corporation’s Social Employment Fund to do health testing house to house.”

Eventually, says Harris, there could be 80 people linked to each of the 46 mobile clinics, meaning that a total of 3 680 trained people could be going from door to door.

“Going forward we’d want to find the disease before the disease finds us – TB, HIV, hypertension, diabetes and general growth issues [in children] are the core areas we will address in this programme,” he says.

But the extent to which Keready can deliver on its ambitious expansion plans will depend on funding and to what extent government continues to implement services using mobile clinic outreach programmes. The German financial contribution to the Keready project comes to an end in September. “We are working day and night to get more funding,” says Harris. He says they will soon be meeting with potential donors.

Disclosure: Segar was hosted by the Keready team.

Republished from Spotlight under a Creative Commons licence.

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Opinion: We can’t Simply Close Dental Facilities during the Festive Period

Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko on Pexels

By Bulela Vava for Spotlight

On the 2nd of January 2024, Simphiwe*, needing emergency oral healthcare, turned to the Cala District Hospital in the Eastern Cape. However, she was confronted with a note on the door that read, “Dear Community Members, starting from the 18th of December 2023 to the 12th of January 2024 there is no dentist. The dentist will start working on the 15th of January 2024.”

Many such notices hang in front of oral health clinic doors, mostly where dentists work alone to respond to the myriad of emergency oral health needs within their catchment area. Having previously worked alone at a provincial government funded hospital in the rural Eastern Cape, similar notices would be placed on the door to the oral health clinic I operated, until such time as a colleague joined me at the facility.

Oral diseases affect more than 3 billion people globally, while in Africa, it affects an estimated 400 million people.

Oral diseases and conditions that affect people include trauma-related oral injuries, oral cancers, dental decay, and periodontal disease amongst others.

While dental decay remains the most common form of oral disease, untreated, it can lead to life-threatening complications. The closure of dental services at any oral health clinic may subject people to the risk of developing conditions such as Ludwig’s angina, a life-threatening condition that is linked to delayed access to care.

Fewer than 200 dentists

The Eastern Cape is predominantly a rural province, with most of the province’s 7.2 million people largely depending on public healthcare services for the majority, if not all their healthcare needs. The province employs fewer than 200 dentists, a majority of whom are concentrated in the more urban/peri-urban centres.

Cala, a rural town in the province’s Sakhisizwe Local Municipality, is home to an estimated 63 000 people and Cala District Hospital provides access to oral health services to this population. The hospital’s closed dental clinic over the festive period deprived the people of Cala of much-needed care.

It is well known that the festive period results in an increased need for emergency healthcare, including oral healthcare services. People often present with jaw fractures, tooth fractures -often a result of violence or accidents associated with an increase in alcohol consumption -, oral pain and sepsis. While the festive period may result in the increased need for managing these conditions, these are the usual conditions, amongst others, that are managed in many public oral health clinics in most provinces.

Oral health professionals, in particular dentists, are trained to manage the complete spectrum of general oral diseases and often refer to dental specialists for complex and specialised management. In a province like the Eastern Cape, characterised by a dire shortage of dental specialists, dentists are the last defence for many of the people in the province.

A significant portion of dentists in the province work alone, with limited options to manage their leave, often leaving clinics closed in their absence.

However, the closure of dental clinics without a detailed and well-communicated plan is unacceptable and places the lives of populations in danger. At times, people have been known to resort to harmful and dangerous home practices to relieve themselves of their anguish.

We need a plan

A comprehensive plan must be put in place for efficient management and referral of emergency oral healthcare cases during the festive period so that we avoid a repeat of this year’s unacceptable situation at Cala District Hospital 12 months down the line. People in need of oral health services must be made aware of where they can access such services without any delay.

Beyond this, there is a need to invest in building adequate human resource capacity for oral health in the province, to ensure that services are readily available. A mix of oral health professionals and the prioritisation of “lone dentist” clinics for community service placements should help alleviate some of the problems in the system.

It is concerning that the challenges faced in the Eastern Cape is very similar to those in other parts of the country. Fewer than 3000 dentists are working in the public healthcare sector nationwide. With such numbers it is unlikely that what happened to Simphiwe was an isolated incident. Her experience should serve as an important case study, highlighting the significant problems faced by communities and oral health professionals.

Those responsible for managing oral healthcare services in South Africa must take note and recognise that the continued deprioritisation and neglect of the population’s oral health cannot be allowed to continue.  We must work together to ensure that oral health is given the attention it deserves as a critical aspect of general health and well-being.

*Dr Vava is the President of the Public Oral Health Forum, a network of public oral health professionals striving for oral health equity, dignity and well-being for all.

Republished from Spotlight under a Creative Commons licence.

Source: Spotlight

Striking Eastern Cape Paramedics Face Dismissal

Photo by Camilo Jimenez on Unsplash

The Eastern Cape Department of Health has served more than 200 paramedics with letters of intention to dismiss them for embarking on a strike.

Long-standing problems with access to ambulances in parts of the Eastern Cape have worsened over the last three weeks as paramedics have stopped work in Buffalo City Municipality, Amahlathi and Raymond Mhlaba Local Municipality. The paramedics are demanding fully equipped ambulances, with valid licence discs, and cellphones. 

They want electrocardiography (ECG ) monitors, batteries, spine boards, blankets, head blocks, cervical collars, and baby cribs.

The workers are members of the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (NEHAWU) which maintains that the paramedics are not on strike but are exercising their right to safety at work. The paramedics come to work everyday in full uniform and wait at their work places until their shifts are over.

One of the workers, who has been a paramedic for six years, told GroundUp: “The service we offer to the public is very poor. Our ambulances have no equipment. There are no machines to check diabetes and high blood pressure. Our radios don’t function because we work in deep rural areas where there is a network problem. We use our cellphones to respond to the calls and communicate with our control room.”

“These issues have been raised for many years with the department but it has always been empty promises. If we transport a patient in an ambulance which is not fully equipped the department shifts the blame on us if something wrong happens to the patient. We are not on strike, because we come daily to work.”

“The Department is threatening to fire us but it’s fully aware that it is failing its workers and patients.”

When GroundUp visited Fort Beaufort Provincial Hospital on Tuesday, we found patients being transported in private vehicles.

Thando Ntsume from Hillside dropped a patient in casualty with his private vehicle. “I could see that she was in severe pain and battling to breathe. Her family had been calling for an ambulance since the morning but it never arrived.”

“I know from my own experience that there are no ambulances available in this hospital. Three months ago I was stabbed and admitted to this hospital. Doctors transferred me to Cecilia Makiwane Hospital but they told me I should find my own transport because ambulances are not available. My brother had to take me with his car to East London.”

Patients outside the Fort Beaufort Provincial Hospital casualty department complain about the lack of ambulances. Photo: Mkhuseli Sizani

Mihlali Matshoba says the ambulance crisis has been going on for a long time. “On 7 October I gave birth at home because ambulances are not available here in Fort Beaufort. Sometimes they are hours late or we are told there is only one ambulance operating.”

Nolly Oliphant had to borrow money to put fuel in her car to take her son to Cecilia Makiwane Hospital after he injured his hand.

“I drove with him to Fort Beaufort Provincial Hospital. The doctors treated him and told me that I should take him with my own transport to Cecilia Makiwane Hospital. “I had to borrow R1,200 for fuel because ambulances are not available.”

“The strike has been devastating,” said one of the Fort Beaufort doctors. “We had to ventilate a patient in Fort Beaufort for over 24 hours because of the strike. Eventually we managed to get a private ambulance to come. The hospitals have been using their bakkies to transport patients.”

Regional NEHAWU coordinator Mzamane Mgwantashe says the workers are not on strike. “Over 200 workers are coming everyday to work. But they cannot perform their duties because ambulances are faulty and not fully equipped. In February, ambulances were fully equipped by the Department in order to obtain service compliance certificates. The same day after the assessment was done the equipment was stripped by the Department. We don’t know why that was done and we don’t know where that equipment was taken.”

He said workers had been told cellphones had been bought for them, but they had never received them. “Instead the Department bought ‘push-to-talk’ devices without consulting the workers.”

Mkhululi Ndamase, spokesperson for Health MEC Nomakhosazana Meth, confirmed the notices to dismiss over 200 workers who had embarked on an unprotected strike. He said the department had addressed the issues raised by the union.

“All vehicles are licensed annually and a certificate of fitness is issued before a vehicle is put on the road. We are in agreement that if a vehicle does not carry the valid licence and/or the certificate of fitness displayed, it should not be used. There are more than enough vehicles in the pool even while vehicles may be grounded whilst being repaired. The rough terrain of our predominantly rural areas and high volume usage does make them vulnerable to breakdowns.”

He said the vehicles were replaced every 300,000 km.

On the issue of cellphones, he said the department had issued “push-to-talk devices” earlier this year and most paramedics had accepted them. Responding to the complaint about equipment being put in the ambulances just to get licence approval, Ndamase said this was being investigated.

“None of these issues are considered valid reasons to suspend services to the communities we serve.”

The department was using private ambulances to respond to emergency calls, which was costly. Two of these ambulances had been stoned, he said.

Ndamase said a rule of no work no pay would apply.

Written by Mkhuseli Sizani for GroundUp.

Source: GroundUp

This article is reproduced under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.