From the heart of the Winelands, Pebbles Kitchen is helping fill many young tummies with nutritious meals

From the heart of the Winelands, Pebbles Kitchen is helping fill many young tummies with nutritious meals

Despite the country’s relative wealth, South Africa has shockingly high levels of childhood malnutrition and stunting. Biénne Huisman spends some time with a small team who have made it their business to bring solutions to the table and to get nutritious meals to the kids of farm workers in the Western Cape.

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Between silence and sirens: Cape Town trauma surgeon Dr Deidre McPherson’s midnight vigils

Between silence and sirens: Cape Town trauma surgeon Dr Deidre McPherson’s midnight vigils

Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town has one of the busiest emergency centres in the Western Cape. As it turns to the public to raise R20 million for the opening of a new emergency centre, Dr Deidre McPherson chats to Biénne Huisman about the hospital’s trauma frontline.

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Medical devices aren’t regulated in SA, but that is set to change

Medical devices aren’t regulated in SA, but that is set to change

Unlike with medicines, and with a few exceptions, South Africa’s regulator does not assess whether diagnostic tests and other medical devices on the market are safe and work as they are supposed to. The regulator has however started down a road that should eventually lead to the regulation of all medical devices in the country. Catherine Tomlinson unpacks the details.

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SA has very low organ donation rates – how can we fix it?

SA has very low organ donation rates – how can we fix it?

Thousands of people in South Africa are waiting for a life-saving organ transplant, but our very low organ donation rates mean that many won’t get a transplant in time. Elri Voigt asks the experts why our donation rates are so low and what can be done about it.

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Bulela Vava | Today’s poor oral health in SA is partly a legacy of apartheid

Bulela Vava | Today’s poor oral health in SA is partly a legacy of apartheid

We need to confront the racialised and class-based structures that still dictate society’s oral health outcomes, argues Dr Bulela Vava as we head toward the end of this year’s National Oral Health Month.

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EDITORIAL | The rot runs deep: Gauteng Health’s dance of impunity betrays the people it is meant to serve

EDITORIAL | The rot runs deep: Gauteng Health’s dance of impunity betrays the people it is meant to serve

The courts have spoken. The health ombud has issued devastating reports. The Auditor-General has again put damning evidence on the table. Civil society has protested. Yet, the devastating crisis in Gauteng’s health system shows no sign of improvement.

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Cancer court battle rumbles on as Gauteng Health again appeals

Cancer court battle rumbles on as Gauteng Health again appeals

Activists say the Gauteng department of health’s late appeal to a court judgement that compels it to act on cancer treatment backlogs is raising more questions about what the department believes it stands to lose from not doing as the courts have ruled, reports Ufrieda Ho.

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On which legal arguments are the NHI court cases set to turn? Part 1: Affordability

On which legal arguments are the NHI court cases set to turn? Part 1: Affordability

Since President Cyril Ramaphposa signed the NHI Act into law last year in May, eight different groups have challenged it in court. One common argument is that it is irrational and unreasonable to restructure the health system when there’s no money to do so. In this feature, Spotlight dissects how the argument is being applied, and whether it has any chance of success.

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Response to aid cuts and HIV prevention injections dominate discussions at SA AIDS conference

Response to aid cuts and HIV prevention injections dominate discussions at SA AIDS conference

A dire picture for HIV/Aids funding emerged at the 12th South African AIDS Conference, raising the call for resilience, adapting and also for government to raise its game, reports Ufrieda Ho.

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Battle to breathe: What we know about air pollution in Mpumalanga and people’s health

Battle to breathe: What we know about air pollution in Mpumalanga and people’s health

Journalist Sue Segar and photographer Thom Pierce recently visited Emalahleni in Mpumalanga to report on how air pollution is impacting the health of people in the area. In part 3 of this Spotlight special series, we zoom in on the science of air pollution and what it does to the human body.

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A new HIV prevention jab could end AIDS – unless secrecy and greed get in the way

A new HIV prevention jab could end AIDS – unless secrecy and greed get in the way

A new HIV prevention jab has the potential to bring an end to the AIDS epidemic. But a lack of ambition and unjustifiable secrecy over pricing is holding it back, argue three leading health activists.

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How a Cape Town mother gave birth to ‘miracle baby’ who grew outside her womb

How a Cape Town mother gave birth to ‘miracle baby’ who grew outside her womb

Joshua was safely delivered from Sylvia’s belly instead of her uterus one year ago. Biénne Huisman meets mother and baby, and hears from some of the healthcare professionals involved in the remarkable outcome.

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