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EMERGENCY EXIT

Nelson Mandela Bay state hospitals face collapse – doctors resign on ‘unprecedented’ scale

Nelson Mandela Bay state hospitals face collapse – doctors resign on ‘unprecedented’ scale
An ambulance outside Livingstone Hospital in Nelson Mandela Bay. (Photo: Shiraaz Mohamed)

State hospitals in Nelson Mandela Bay are foundering in the wake of crippling staff shortages, broken equipment, basic drug stockouts, emergency surgery delays, a specialist doctor brain drain, slashed operating times, a lack of nurses and a sharp rise in the neonatal death rate.

Doctors at the three hospitals that comprise Gqeberha’s Livingstone Tertiary Hospital have called on the Eastern Cape Department of Health to move to “crisis management” for its hospitals and clearly communicate to the public that only limited healthcare will now be available. 

Specialist services for the western part of the Eastern Cape are spread across three hospitals in Gqeberha: Livingstone Hospital, Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital and Dora Nginza Hospital. Dora Nginza Hospital handles paediatric, obstetric and gynaecology services; PE Provincial deals with cardiology, ophthalmology, paediatric oncology, haematology, cardiology, ear-nose-and-throat specialist services and urology and cardiothoracic surgery. Livingstone Hospital handles the rest of the specialist services including the Accident and Emergency Unit and emergency psychiatric services.

Collectively, this is known as Livingstone Tertiary Hospital and when doctors refer to the “hospital” it is to this combined entity that they refer.  

hospital collapse

The hospital serves a large part of the Eastern Cape, stretching to the Karoo and along the Eastern Cape coastline. There are about 2.5 million people in the health districts that drain to Livingstone Hospital, but some of its specialist services are the only available ones for the entire province of roughly seven million people.  

“Patients often die awaiting ICU beds. The effect across all departments is clear, and nursing shortages result in less time for observations, medicine administration and patient care. Medication errors are plentiful, patients are often neglected and adverse events are common,” warned one of several letters written to the health department.

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Yet, despite its importance in delivering medical services to the Eastern Cape community, the hospital has not had a permanent CEO since 2018, only several acting ones. Finally, as the hospital was facing an unprecedented crisis in 2020, a senior director, Dr Mtandeki Xamlashe, was sent down from Bhisho to manage things.

In 2018, the hospital’s CEO, Thulane Madonsela — who was headhunted for the job — and his entire management team were run out of the hospital by unions after more than 100 theft cases were opened against staff members at the hospital. Despite their suspension being declared unlawful in a hearing, most — including Madonsela — have since resigned. 

“There is no acknowledgement of the crisis at hand to move from this mindset to one of crisis management where we are able to prioritise the key issues and communicate it to the staff and public so that the expectation of what can be provided is actually provided,” a joint letter from the metro’s specialists addressed to senior management at the Eastern Cape Department of Health read. 

In the letter, they warn the department that it is no longer possible for them to continue treating people with the necessary care. The doctors also say that they are encountering an increasingly aggressive workplace.  

“The current situation at Livingstone hospital is dire. The mixture of budget shortages and bureaucratic inefficiencies has stripped every department of the tools to do even the most basic of jobs required… and has resulted in poor working conditions, staff burnout and frustration, infrastructure failure, equipment shortages, medication shortages, long waiting lists and ultimately in suboptimal, undignified patient care with high chances of future litigation. There are major inefficiencies in the service driven by passive-aggressive and often overtly aggressive behaviour in an attempt to minimise work stress and to manage the daily load.”

Frustrated by the conditions at these hospitals, several highly trained specialists and heads of department are leaving or have left Livingstone Tertiary Hospital, in an unprecedented exit. They have made it clear that they have had enough. 

“There is no final straw. This camel’s back has been broken,” said one doctor. 

hospital collapse

Medical waste, broken beds and chairs are scattered in the back yard at the Livingstone hospital. (Photo: Luvuyo Mehlwana)

The hospital no longer has a permanent neurologist or a head of emergency medicine, both the urologists have left, the sessional cardiologist has left (and there are no permanent ones), and several surgeons have departed as they could no longer operate due to staff, equipment and electricity problems.  

Also gone is the only orthopaedic spinal surgeon the hospital had, as well as  the only surgeon with specialist training in gallbladder and liver surgery, and the head of the cardiothoracic surgery department.  

System breakdown 

The health department has blamed the challenges on limited budgets and medico-legal claims. 

Many nurses died of Covid-19 or resigned, most of them highly skilled, experienced and trained. Many reported suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after the Covid-19 pandemic; few have been replaced. 

The hospital’s busy casualty unit has been operating without an area manager or an operational manager as both had retired and were not replaced, and the highly skilled and much sought-after head of emergency medicine resigned and emigrated.  

Hospital management has been warned of multiple “adverse events and avoidable deaths” in the Accident and Emergency Unit based at Livingstone Hospital.  

On many days it does not even have life-saving equipment such as electrodes for an ECG machine, a simple and fast way to diagnose heart problems.

Porters in the highly unionised hospital are “seldom to be found” and doctors and nurses are often seen wheeling their patients to the wards. The hospital management was warned that porters were refusing to move respiratory patients or those who are awaiting Covid-19 test results.

No cleaning is done in the Emergency Department on a Sunday. Bins are not cleared for days. There remains a dire shortage of linen in all departments. The CT scanner in the Emergency Unit has been broken since 2020 and has never been replaced. The X-ray machine is also not working. 

Multiple assaults on staff members and patients have been reported in the 72-hour emergency holding facility for psychiatric patients based at Livingstone Hospital. Patients must now remain in the casualty unit for 10 days waiting for a bed.

hospital collapse laundry

A mountain of used hospital gowns and linen bundled up and left on a trolley in the laundry. (Photo: Luvuyo Mehlwana)

The hospitals have a major backlog of theatre cases, made worse by the problems at the Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital, mostly caused by a nursing and linen shortage as well as a dearth of anaesthetists — the department has not received a staffing organogram in the past 10 years and some posts have taken more than two years to fill.

Livingstone Tertiary Hospital has one of only two ICUs in the province, but due to staff shortages, the number of beds has been reduced from 16 to 12. 

There is no oncology-trained nurse in the oncology outpatient clinic, where most patients receive their chemotherapy. The position of chief radiation therapist has not been filled in two years. About 800 patients have to wait for between 10 to 12 months for radiotherapy. A bid for a new radiotherapy machine has been cancelled and the one currently in use switches off due to power dips at Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital and takes 15 minutes to warm up again. 

There are no porters in the oncology ward. If patients are moved to another part of the hospital they must be wheeled through the public parking lot because an access door has been broken and is now padlocked.  

Doctors desperately need drugs that are at risk of not being supplied due to unpaid bills, including the IV drug needed to prevent extreme nausea for chemotherapy patients. No first-line antibiotics are used for chemotherapy. 

Hospital management was also told that doctors are concerned about the “crumbling building” and that parts of the hospital are unsafe for patients and staff — with specific reference to Livingstone Hospital and Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital.  

Paediatric care collapses 

All specialist and general paediatric outpatient clinics face closure due to staff shortages. These are based at Dora Nginza Hospital. 

Dora Nginza Hospital was for long the poster child for healthcare in the province after successfully reducing the neonatal death rate up to 2019. However, since the departure of a highly regarded specialist neonatologist, the death rate at Dora Nginza Hospital increased from 19/1,000 in 2019 to 25/1,000 the following year.  

Staff shortages also affect the number of patients that can be treated at Paediatric Oncology and only two children with heart problems can be assisted per week at this department. Many are becoming inoperable due to complications 

Elective caesarean sections have a waiting time of 10-11 days and emergency C-sections eight to 10 hours.  

hospital collapse outpatients

Cardboard stuffed with rubbish dumped in front of the special outpatients department. (Photo: Luvuyo Mehlwana)

The small team of specialists are doing up to 30 emergency C-sections a day.  

Hospital management was also warned that there had been increases in hospital-acquired infections related to poor nurse/patient ratios. 

The Democratic Alliance’s Jane Cowley said she had confirmed that amputations had to be performed on several patients as they could not receive orthopaedic surgery. 

“Doctors are desperately trying to address the backlog but they do not have the implants required for these [orthopaedic] surgeries [at Livingstone]. The backlog in surgeries is further exacerbated by the fact that only five out of eight operating theatres are being used due to shortages of medical personnel,” Cowley added. 


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 Doctors fearful

Doctors are fearful when they talk about the dire conditions in the hospitals, saying that those who do speak up are targeted. Fear was also generated by the suspension of the head of supply chain management this week. 

“Each department has forwarded lists of complaints through multiple channels, which is occasionally acknowledged, but there is very little in the way of solutions. As clinicians, we are conflicted with the expectation that we should provide a reasonable standard of evidence-based care, yet are not given the tools to do the job. We are certainly not a tertiary hospital in any way other than name.” 

hospital collapse wagner

Rolene Wagner is the head of the Eastern Cape Department of Health. (Photo: Supplied)

This was said in one in a series of letters written to the hospital’s acting CEO, Mtandeki Xamlashe, the director of clinical services at the Department of Health, Dr Litha Matiwane, and the head of the Eastern Cape health department, Dr Rolene Wagner, in which clinicians warned of the fast deterioration of hospital services, the resignation of senior specialists and heads of department and the impact of a debilitating staff shortage and electricity crisis at Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital — where heart, neurology and some cancer patients are treated. 

They have received no response, apart from a cursory acknowledgement. 

In July, Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital was the site of heartbreaking scenes when desperate families carried their family members up and down several flights of stairs as they waited for surgery, but got sent home because electricity problems stopped all surgery.

In this hospital’s cardiac ICU, a doctor kept a patient on life support with nothing but a generator and a power cord.

hospital collapse

Dr Mtandeki Xamlashe, acting CEO for the Livingstone Tertiary Hospital in Gqeberha. (Photo: Deon Ferreira)

A plumbing contractor at the hospital had damaged an electrical cable, which led to the power at the facility being off for more than a week. Xamlashe explained earlier in August that this had damaged the hospital’s electrical system, and they were waiting for a compliance certificate before surgery could resume at the facility.

“Patients are once again bearing the brunt of all of this,” he said.

On August 11, eight orthopaedic surgeons, including the four most senior specialists, spent a day doing nothing as there was no linen in the hospital.  

Fiscal management issues

In a recent court case where the Eastern Cape Department of Health argued that the continued payment of judgments for medico-legal claims would lead to the collapse of public health in the province, Judge Jannie Eksteen pointed out that the department and the provincial treasury were continually ignoring legislation by not budgeting for these claims.  

The Eastern Cape Department of Health has consistently blamed the poor state of healthcare in the province on the high number of medico-legal claims they have to deal with. The province is facing a staggering R38-billion in contingent liabilities. 

Eksteen found: “…[T]hey ascribe their financial woes to medico-legal claims, which undeniably have escalated dramatically, not only in the Eastern Cape but throughout the country… they attribute their current embarrassment to numerous factors, including the ‘excessive litigation’ against the [department] by unscrupulous and dishonest attorneys, the incompetent and under-resourced state attorney(s), particularly in the Mthatha office, who [are] unable to provide effective legal advice or representation, awards which have over-compensated plaintiffs in medico-legal matters and the national government, which has failed to heed their call for legislative measures.” 

The judge added that the department and the MEC “firmly denied any suggestions of mismanagement” but: “The fiscal management of the [department] and indeed of Treasury is cause for grave concern.” 

He said it was unfounded for the department to think that they cannot budget for legal judgments.

“Section 27 of the Constitution… provides for everyone to have a right to access healthcare and obliges the state to take reasonable measures, within its available resources to achieve [this]. The available resources are the difference between the income flow of the department and its liabilities. There is nothing in section 27 of the Constitution which prevents the Eastern Cape Department of Health from budgeting for known liabilities and contingent liabilities.” 

He said failing to budget for these liabilities constituted financial mismanagement. He said an instruction from the Eastern Cape Treasury not to budget for these liabilities was unlawful. 

“The conclusion is inescapable that the management of the finances of the Eastern Cape government, and in particular the Eastern Cape Department of Health falls far short of the standard demanded by the Public Finance Management Act.”  

The Auditor-General also expressed her grave concern about the way the Eastern Cape Treasury was dealing with the medico-legal claims. 

“Especially in the health sector, not budgeting for medical negligence claims means that all successful claims will be paid from funds earmarked for the delivery of services, resulting in these departments using more than what is allocated to them,” the AG’s latest report reads. 

Similar concerns were raised in the department’s 2020/2021 annual report where they were acknowledged as posing problems for the facility.

Department of Health responds

The Eastern Cape Department of Health’s communications director, Siyanda Manana, said the department was able to run Livingstone Tertiary Hospital in a safe way. 

He said acting CEO Xamlashe had not received any letters from doctors expressing their concern over conditions at the hospital. 

Manana also claimed that no heads of department had left in the past 18 months. “The last HOD left five years ago,” he said.  

It is well known in Nelson Mandela Bay that the head of Internal Medicine, Fikile Nomvete, left Livingstone Hospital in 2019 to become director of the Nelson Mandela University Medical School. The heads of Emergency Medicine and Neonatology have left Livingstone Hospital in the past two years, as has the head of neurosurgery, but Manana said none of them was the head of a department. 

He confirmed that the hospital had lost its urologists.  

“One urologist has resigned to go to East London whilst the other one will do sessions. We are in the process of recruiting two urologists. 

“The head of the Cardiothoracic Department has been given a contract post-retirement. The process of recruiting and training another one is unfolding.”  

He said they were in the process of recruiting more neurologists and “have received applications”, but added that as the clinical manager was a neurologist, the hospital still technically had one.   

“The services are running though as the clinical manager is a neurologist. We do have a spinal surgeon.”  

He said: “Linen has been outsourced completely to three companies.”

He confirmed that the supply chain manager had been suspended because he is under investigation. “The matter is sub judice.”

Despite the department admitting in its own annual report that the supervision of porters was lacking, Manana said the porters were working.  

He said that while Xamlashe was the acting CEO, it was also his responsibility to attend meetings throughout the province and the respective managers had to engage with him.  

He claimed that surgery had resumed at Port Elizabeth Provincial Hospital “last week”. DM/MC

Gallery

Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Erma Gardner says:

    How does one turn this sad state of affairs around? Not under the current government, for sure. Sounds like Thulane Madonsela and his team were on the right track (getting rid of the rubbish), so why were they aloud to “run management out”?

  • Dennis Bailey says:

    The people of Mandela bay got what they voted for. If they want better, they should vote better.

  • Gloria Greyvenstein says:

    This has been coming for years. We have seen an increase in ‘medical refugees’ from the Eastern Cape filtering into hospitals along the neighbouring garden route for years, and the numbers are increasing exponentially. Lets face it, the Eastern Cape is a failed state.

  • Barrie Lewis says:

    There was once a king named Midas; everything he touched turned to gold, including his daughter.
    Then there was a governing party named the ANC; everything they touched turned to kaput. A memo should be sent to the governing elite not to touch their children; anything could happen.
    The Eastern Cape voted the ANC in; they have the government they deserve. Roll on 2024; it is rumoured Jesus will return and sweep the party from power. We live in interesting times.

  • nickha says:

    And now we wait for National Health Insurance to be implemented. Disaster waiting to happen.

  • Hilary Morris says:

    Just wait till the whole NHI plan is implemented. This horror will look like paradise. Oh, wait again, that’s not likely to happen either. Our public health systems seems designed to decimate the population, and it is incredible that any doctor continues to work under these conditions. PTSD must be rife in any state hospital. There seems to be no end to what the ANC can wreck.

  • Confucious Says says:

    Despicable!!!

  • Malcolm Mitchell says:

    Not surprised at the situation – what else do you expect from the deployed cadres!!

  • Lee Richardson says:

    Breaking: voters get what they voted for

  • Ian Callender-Easby says:

    C’mon Aaron, bring on the NHI…🙃

  • Roy Haines says:

    These problems will only be resolved when the ANC cadres are gotten rid of and replaced by professionals that actually know what they’re doing and are motivated to do their jobs.

  • Bernhard Scheffler says:

    Prevention is better than cure. So is it not correct to prioritize

    (A) health care, over
    (B) medical litigation {generally attempt to “cure” failures in (A)}?

    Why are legislative steps not taken to enable a focus on what really matters to everyone (except unscupulous exploiters)?

  • Christopher Allsobrook says:

    It is no accident that our most famous leaders were lawyers.
    We have no shortage of lawyers to eat the medical budget.
    The Eastern Cape state has disappeared into the bush.
    Abandoned to snakes and goats, the state has lost more than authority.
    It is practically invisible.

  • Thomas Cleghorn says:

    But Eastern Cape Department of Health’s communications director, Siyanda Manana, says it’s all fine. Livingstone Tertiary Hospital is run in a safe way, theres just a small problem with the supervision of porters. Move on, nothing to see here. Spin me another…

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