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Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Calls grow for loadshedding exemptions for healthcare facilities

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As the country experiences one of the worst bouts of blackouts this year, calls are growing for hospitals and clinics to be turned into loadshedding-free zones.

The situation prompted the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) to request loadshedding exemptions for public clinics and hospitals.

In a statement, HPCSA president Professor Simon Nemutandani said because of loadshedding, “hospitals in the country are buckling under pressure”.

According to Nemutandani, more than 80% of South Africans depend on the public health system. The country has about 420 state-run hospitals and more than 3 000 state-run clinics.

While private facilities and secondary and tertiary public hospitals have generator banks, not all smaller hospitals and clinics have them.

He said:This has created more strain [for] the already far-stretched healthcare system. Loadshedding has negatively impacted the provision of quality care in all our health facilities and placed an enormous strain on the health practitioners on their daily routine of work.

“Power supply interruptions place critically ill patients who are dependent on life-support machines at risk. The performance and life span of medical equipment and devices are negatively affected by power interruptions,” he said.

Nemutandani also said hospitals could not perform emergency surgeries, putting patients at risk and added that the training of future health professionals was also at risk.

“These health facilities are also platforms used for undergraduates’ internships and postgraduate training of health professionals who are also negatively affected by loadshedding.”

His call from the exemptions was echoed in a petition Professor Adam Mohamed, the head of internal medicine at Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital penned.

In the petition, Mohamed said the Western Cape had exempted healthcare facilities from loadshedding and he urged Gauteng to do the same.

He said:The government couldn’t prevent Covid deaths but surely it can prevent unnecessary loadshedding deaths. [The] Gauteng provincial government exempts hospitals from being load shed! Stand up and be counted and urge your ward councillors and politicians to assist patients in getting the best care possible.

The petition, which has garnered more than 32 000 signatures so far, also raised the alarm on the cost of loadshedding for facilities.

“During loadshedding, a hospital like Charlotte Maxeke burns between 800 and 900 litres of diesel a day. This translates into an expenditure of between R5 million and R8 million a month – which all comes out of the provincial health budget. This means that there is R5 million to R8 million less to spend on patient care.”

News24

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