New Western Cape health MEC Mireille Wenger says child health is near her heart

New Western Cape health MEC Mireille Wenger says child health is near her heart

Mireille Wenger was recently appointed to the Western Cape’s top health job. Biénne Huisman chatted to Wenger about health policy, child health, and the challenge of providing quality public health services at a time of shrinking budgets.

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Why we don’t have long-acting HIV treatment in South Africa

Why we don’t have long-acting HIV treatment in South Africa

In South Africa, taking HIV treatment means taking one or more antiretroviral tablets a day. People in some other countries have the additional option of treatment in the form of two injections administered every two months. Elri Voigt unpacks why long-acting HIV treatment is not available in South Africa and asks why the push for HIV prevention jabs has been so much stronger than that for HIV treatment jabs.

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Meet the movie buff and scientist fighting to keep rural healthcare from falling through the cracks

Meet the movie buff and scientist fighting to keep rural healthcare from falling through the cracks

Working with women in Giyani in Limpopo sparked the flame for Professor Kathy Kahn to dedicate her research career to the rural community she says she is “bonded to”. She tells Spotlight’s Ufrieda Ho why it’s been this way since she was a student in medical school.

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EDITORIAL | Behind the Life Esidimeni headlines is the suffering of human beings who deserved better

EDITORIAL | Behind the Life Esidimeni headlines is the suffering of human beings who deserved better

While we focus here on the nine deaths that Judge Mmonoa Teffo found to be unnatural, there were 144 deaths associated with the Life Esidimeni tragedy. Ultimately, these were human beings and for the world to know what happened to them is better than the world not knowing.

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Face to face: Healthcare veteran Kgosi Letlape on leaving the ANC, serving in parliament, and the tragic loss of his daughter

Face to face: Healthcare veteran Kgosi Letlape on leaving the ANC, serving in parliament, and the tragic loss of his daughter

Former ANC member, now with ActionSA, Kgosi Letlape was recently elected to parliament’s health committee. Biénne Huisman spoke to the past president of the Health Professions Council of SA about leaving the ANC, healthcare in the country, gender-based violence, and the murder of his daughter.  

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AIDS 2024: Exciting developments with the jabs promising to revolutionise HIV prevention

AIDS 2024: Exciting developments with the jabs promising to revolutionise HIV prevention

Taking antiretrovirals to prevent HIV infection mostly still involves swallowing one or more pills a day. Some long-acting products that work for a month or two at a time have been approved but are not yet in wide use in South Africa. As delegates gathered for the 25th International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2024) last week, Elri Voigt takes stock of the latest developments in this fast-moving field.

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Childhood vaccine coverage in SA declined in 2023, finds WHO report

Childhood vaccine coverage in SA declined in 2023, finds WHO report

New data from the World Health Organization and UNICEF show that globally childhood immunisation coverage stalled in 2023, while in South Africa it decreased. Elri Voigt unpacks the new data and asks local experts to put it in context.

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Medicines stockouts persist in North West as tide turns slowly

Medicines stockouts persist in North West as tide turns slowly

Despite some improvement over the past three years, the North West province continues to experience medicine shortages, according to a survey by a community clinic monitoring initiative. Nthusang Lefafa unpacks the latest findings and asks why shortages persist in the province.

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“Not being afraid to speak out, it does get me into trouble quite often,” says Prof Shabir Madhi

“Not being afraid to speak out, it does get me into trouble quite often,” says Prof Shabir Madhi

Amid the uncertainty of the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, Professor Shabir Madhi often stood out for his clarity of thought in making sense of rapidly evolving scientific evidence. Biénne Huisman chatted to Madhi about vaccines, ongoing challenges with the Gauteng health department, and being outspoken about issues such as the war in Gaza.

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Walking with “nomakhayas”: How the Bulungula Incubator is creating change in Wild Coast communities

Walking with “nomakhayas”: How the Bulungula Incubator is creating change in Wild Coast communities

An innovative health programme is thriving and making a difference in the lives of people in a rural Eastern Cape community. Sue Segar spent time with the project, walking with “nomakhayas” from house-to-house and taking a ferry trip across the Xhora river.

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“We were the first ones to do it”: Innovative SA study takes TB testing to people’s homes

“We were the first ones to do it”: Innovative SA study takes TB testing to people’s homes

Most tuberculosis (TB) tests still require a trip to the clinic. Now, new technology has made it possible to test people at home. This could be a big deal for South Africa, where much TB goes undiagnosed. Tiyese Jeranji unpacks the findings and implications of a recent study into such TB home testing.

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Questions over new Limpopo health MEC Dieketseng Mashego, but stakeholders willing to give her a chance

Questions over new Limpopo health MEC Dieketseng Mashego, but stakeholders willing to give her a chance

The deployment of the relatively unknown Dieketseng Mashego as Limpopo’s new MEC for health has raised eyebrows. Ufrieda Ho rounds up some responses to her appointment.

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