In-Depth: Mpumalanga’s healthcare worker shortage and what is being done about it

In-Depth: Mpumalanga’s healthcare worker shortage and what is being done about it

There are over 100 clinics in Mpumalanga without visiting doctors, hundreds waiting on surgeries in hospitals due to a lack of surgeons and other specialists, and only 60 working ambulances meant to service a population of over four million healthcare users. Nthusang Lefafa unpacks these challenges and asks the province’s health department about its plans.

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Rheumatology in SA: Patients pay the price for shortage of specialists

Rheumatology in SA: Patients pay the price for shortage of specialists

South Africa’s shortage of rheumatologists often results in patients struggling to access the treatment and care they need, especially for public sector patients and people living in rural areas. Elna Schütz asks several local experts about the state of rheumatology in the country.

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FACE TO FACE: Prof Naeemah Abrahams on breaking feminist stereotypes and “fighting through research and analyses”

FACE TO FACE: Prof Naeemah Abrahams on breaking feminist stereotypes and “fighting through research and analyses”

Professor Naeemah Abrahams, who heads the SAMRC’s Gender and Health Unit has been working in the field of gender-based violence (GBV) for thirty years. Activism always underpinned her research, which has focused on post-rape care, intimate partner femicide, and the interface between GBV and HIV. Biénne Huisman sat down with her to talk about her work, her feminism, and getting men to interrogate their perceptions of masculinity.

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Opinion: Why I became a nurse and what’s needed to fix nursing in SA

Opinion: Why I became a nurse and what’s needed to fix nursing in SA

René Sparks qualified as a nurse 21 years ago. Now, on International Nurses Day, she reflects on her journey and what’s needed to ensure a better future for nursing in South Africa.

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Ramaphosa proclaims ‘health revolution’ at second presidential health summit

Ramaphosa proclaims ‘health revolution’ at second presidential health summit

Round two of the Presidential Health Summit centred on getting closer to realising National Health Insurance, but the question of how to do this remains murky. Ufrieda Ho reports.

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“That iron suitcase saved my life” – retired nurse reflects on 37 years of service

“That iron suitcase saved my life” – retired nurse reflects on 37 years of service

May 5th is International Day of the Midwife. Ufrieda Ho chatted to the remarkable nurse and midwife Boitumelo Motsei about her 37 years working in healthcare and why she still has hope for the nursing profession.

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In-depth: How cystic fibrosis is being treated in SA while breakthrough meds remain out of reach

In-depth: How cystic fibrosis is being treated in SA while breakthrough meds remain out of reach

Spotlight recently reported on a court case aimed at expanding access to breakthrough new treatments for cystic fibrosis (CF) and on how this debilitating disease is diagnosed in South Africa. Now, in Part 3 of this special series on CF, Catherine Tomlinson turns the spotlight on how the disease is currently being treated in the country, while the new treatments are still largely out of reach.

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Access to sufficient colostomy bags still hit-and-miss at Gauteng hospitals

Access to sufficient colostomy bags still hit-and-miss at Gauteng hospitals

Six months after Spotlight first reported on the plight of stoma patients experiencing shortages of colostomy and urostomy bags at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital in Gauteng, users are still reporting shortages at Baragwanath and other hospitals in the province. Thabo Molelekwa reports.

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INTERVIEW:  Being a good doctor requires empathy, says outgoing health ombud Prof Malegapuru Makgoba

INTERVIEW:  Being a good doctor requires empathy, says outgoing health ombud Prof Malegapuru Makgoba

South Africa’s health ombud Professor Malegapuru Makgoba’s tenure as ombud will end at the end of May. Bienne Huisman spoke to him about headline-making investigations into the Life Esidemeni tragedy and conditions at Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital, his childhood in Limpopo, and how he side-stepped former President Nelson Mandela’s invitation to join the African National Congress.

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OPINION: Oral health services for persons with special needs still lacking

OPINION: Oral health services for persons with special needs still lacking

While there is relatively good access to preventative and promotive oral healthcare services in the country, it does not go far enough to address the vast oral health-related issues that persons with disabilities present with, writes Dr Bulela Vava. If the government is to truly care for the oral health needs of persons with special needs, it will have to take bold steps to invest in building the requisite secondary and tertiary oral health service capacity.

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Analysis: Do we have to balance the right to health with the right to strike or do we have to ask different questions of government?

Analysis: Do we have to balance the right to health with the right to strike or do we have to ask different questions of government?

South Africa’s public health sector strikes often pit two rights against each other – the right of workers to strike and the rights of people to access healthcare services. Ufrieda Ho explores these tension points with the help of several relevant experts.

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Face to face: “It’s not about me, it’s about the patient that I’m helping”, says head of trauma at Bara

Face to face: “It’s not about me, it’s about the patient that I’m helping”, says head of trauma at Bara

Professor Rudo Mathivha became director of the Intensive Care Unit at Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital in July 1999, holding her own in a white male-dominated space. Biénne Huisman chatted with Mathivha about her impressive journey, her deep commitment to patients, and the ongoing challenges at the country’s largest hospital.

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