Seven-month-old Kagiso Kobe suffered from diarrhoea and vomited
helplessly for a week as he lay at Limpopo’s George Masebe Hospital outside
Mokopane. There were no doctors available to treat him because almost all of
them had gone on leave for the festive season. Seeing that no help was forthcoming, his mother Connie Kobe requested
that he be discharged. She had hoped to take him to her personal doctor. The
hospital management refused. The next day, a Thursday, Kagiso died. The little
boy is among four children who died last week at the troubled hospital in
Mokopane.
It has now emerged that seven doctors had gone on leave by December 25.
Only one doctor was on duty at the 288-bed hospital. The Limpopo Health
Department said it was investigating why almost all the doctors were allowed to
go on leave at the same time. “The situation here is saddening. It goes against
everything we stand for as a department. I have called for a commission of
inquiry that will report to my office within a week,” said MEC Norman Mabasa. He
said action would be taken against any official found to have acted
negligently.
Two mothers who lost their babies met with Mabasa at the hospital
yesterday. Desia Ratime, 29, broke down in tears as the MEC apologised for the
deaths. Kagiso’s mother said she intended to take legal action against the
department. The three other children were aged between four weeks and 18
months. “I am battling to understand why they refused to discharge my baby,
when they knew that they did not have doctors to help him. This is hurting,”
Kobe told The Star. During his unannounced visit to the hospital’s wards
yesterday, Mabasa met a six-year-old boy who was yet to be seen by a doctor
since his admission on Christmas Day. The boy’s leg was fractured after he was
run over by a car. “The parents of these children are now fighting with us.
They want to discharge them by force,” a nurse told Mabasa.
Mabasa promised that two doctors from neighbouring Voortrekker Hospital
would be transferred to the district hospital immediately. The National
Education, Health and Allied Workers Union wants the hospital management to
account for the deaths. “These babies died of treatable diseases because there
were not enough doctors at the hospital,” the union said in a statement. Mabasa
insisted that the one doctor who had been on duty had seen some of the dead
babies. According to Mabasa, Limpopo has a 70 percent vacancy rate for doctors.
However, he said the province had no money to employ more doctors.
He said he had employed more than 100 doctors last year, despite the
tight budget. “When I arrived here in March, I was told there would be no
doctor or nurse employed in this province because there was no money. I then
wrote a motivation and said ‘not under my watch’. “I motivated to the
legislature, I was allowed to employ 125 doctors and 235 nurses,” said Mabasa. The
four babies’ deaths come as the Limpopo Health Department battles to turn the
tide, more than a year after President Jacob Zuma placed it, alongside four
other provincial departments, under administration.
In December 2010, Zuma took control of the five provincial departments
after Limpopo was plunged into a R2.2 billion cash-flow crisis. The financial
crisis saw the province almost failing to pay public servants their salaries. Widespread
corruption and procurement irregularities have been blamed for the province’s
financial and governance failures. Several people, including public servants
and former ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema, have been arrested, charged
or questioned by the Hawks for allegedly looting the province’s finances.
The Health Department has for years been plagued by allegations of
tender fraud and widespread corruption, maladministration, financial
mismanagement and the theft of medicine from the provincial pharmaceutical
depot. All of these have led to critical medicine shortages, low morale, an
exodus of medical practitioners and occasional protests by health professionals.
The department has also seen a high turnover of heads of department and MECs
since Limpopo Premier Cassel Mathale took over in 2009. It has had three MECs
as well as three heads of department.
Source: The Star SA
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