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Report shows deteriorating conditions at Free State clinics

“Today we were lucky they did not send us back home,” says Makhothatso Mohomaile (63) outside the Bloemspruit Clinic in Mangaung where she is waiting for transport with her brother Maila Kgoaribe (53).

Refilwe Mochoari, writing in Spotlight, says Kgoaribe is in a wheelchair and relies on his sister to get to and from the clinic. Most months, she fetches his chronic medication.

Mohomaile tells Spotlight her biggest challenge is the long waiting times. “On collection days, I arrive here at 6.30am. I live in Phase 10 (an informal settlement about 10km from the clinic), so I leave home at 4.30am and arrive at the clinic at 6.30am. The clinic opens at 8am, and I only get help at around 2pm,” she says.

“They give me one month’s supply of my brother’s medication. Then every three months I have to bring him in for blood tests. Those days are the worst because I need to find transport to drive us to the clinic and that costs us R200 for a return trip. This means sometimes we miss our date because we don’t have money and when we get to the clinic, the nurses shout and sometimes do not want to help us because we missed our date.”

Mohomaile says it often takes longer when they have to do blood tests. "Today we arrived at 5am and we are only finishing now at 4pm,” she says.

Her wish, she says, is for the provincial Department of Health to bring services closer to them. “I leave my house very early and it is still dark at that time. Even when I am at the clinic, it is still not safe because I arrive here when the gates are still closed,” she says.

Small pockets of improvement

A recently published report on the state of health in the Free State suggests the siblings’ experience is not unique. The community-led clinic monitoring project Ritshidze published its latest findings for the province on 29 September.

It shows that while there have been pockets of improvements at some facilities, there are key issues on which performance has worsened, especially for people living with HIV. The data was collected between July and August at 29 clinics and community healthcare facilities across the province, including one facility in Fezile Dabi District, 13 in Lejweleputswa, six in Mangaung Metro, and nine in Thabo Mofutsanyana.

Monitors interviewed 29 facility managers, and 1 349 public healthcare users (of which 71% were people living with HIV), and monitored 29 facilities.

One of the clinics monitored is the Bloemspruit Clinic, on the Old Thaba Nchu road, east of Bloemfontein.

The biggest challenge, say patients, community members, health officials and opposition parties is that the clinic serves too large a population and is not coping. Services continue to deteriorate, they say. The report also flags it as among the worst-performing facilities on waiting times, shortage of staff, bad staff attitudes, and viral load literacy. People living with HIV should get at least one viral load test per year and the results should be shared with them.

Waiting times

Bloemspruit is among the clinics where waiting times were flagged as a concern last year, especially relating to filing systems. To improve waiting times, the report recommended the provincial Health Department must ensure there is functional filing system by this month (October). This year’s report states the filing system has improved, which puts Bloemspruit among the four facilities that improved on this indicator.

Overall, 82% of public healthcare users interviewed across facilities said waiting times were too long – 4% fewer than last year. The most common reasons cited for the long waiting times included the length of time to find files, the messy filing system, and files are lost (60%). Other reasons cited include staff who are not working or are working slowly (50%), and insufficient staff (40%).

Staff and staff attitudes

The report notes that the number of vacancies in the facilities monitored has almost doubled from 26 to 50. At Bloemspruit, for example, the facility manager said they do not have enough staff, especially nurses and security staff. As was the case last year, staff attitudes remained an issue. “Only 41% of people thought the staff were always friendly and professional (down from 44% last year) and 56% of people said staff sent them to the back of the queue if they missed an appointment. The fear of poor treatment only discourages people from going back to the clinic,” the report notes.

This can be especially harmful to the province’s HIV programme. “People living with HIV may miss appointments and even miss taking some pills. When they do, meeting them with support when they return to the clinic helps ensure long-term adherence,” the report reads.

Bloemspruit is listed among the clinics where people living with HIV reported being sent to the back of the queue or being shouted at for missing an appointment. Some people reported being refused care if they did not have a transfer letter or their identity document.

Medicine stockouts

Among Ritshidze’s recommendations on medicine stockouts was that “there must be effective and immediate communication of stockouts between the National Department of Health and Free State Department of Health and to healthcare workers and patients” by October. This, they say, did not happen.

Last year, 8% of patients reported having left facilities without the medicines they needed and 20% of facilities (four sites) reported sending people home empty-handed when faced with a stockout/shortage of medicines.

This year, more patients (13%) indicated they had “left facilities without the medicines they needed, and 31% of facilities (nine sites) reported sending people home empty-handed when faced with a stockout/shortage of medicines”. Among the most commonly reported shortages were for contraceptives and HIV medicines.

Multi-month dispensing

In respect of giving people living with HIV more than a month’s supply of medicines at a time, there was some improvement.

“Compared with the 7% of last year, 13% of people living with HIV received three or six months’ supply of ARVs. Bloemspruit was among the top-performing facilities on this indicator.

“Unnecessary trips to the clinic just to collect an ARV refill adds a burden to people living with HIV and to the already overwhelmed clinic, and healthcare workers,” the report reads. Most people living with HIV who were surveyed (66%) said they would like to collect the ARVs closer to their homes if possible.

On treatment literacy, however, more work is needed. The report states: “Worryingly, only 78% of people living with HIV reported that a healthcare provider explained the results of their viral load test result, down from 82% last year. The Free State is the second worst-performing province on this indicator, following Limpopo.”

Government responds

Mangaung’s district manager for primary healthcare Aron Malete, tells Spotlight the department’s biggest challenge is that the number of people requiring healthcare services keeps increasing while facilities remain the same.

“Just as in the case of Bloemspruit Clinic, the community is growing and the number of informal settlements that are not covered by health is increasing,” he says. “All of those people from areas like Phase 10 are now supposed to be helped at Bloemspruit clinic. We do try to improve services as much as possible by sending out mobile clinics whenever possible.”

Malete says the filing system in many facilities is failing because the registry is too small to accommodate an increasing population.

“At Bloemspruit clinic we are already in the process of bulk filing and it is improving,” he says.

When asked why there is no electronic system in place for patient files, he says those are options the department can consider but will take too long to implement. “We need a solution that we can work with right now because we are facing the challenges right now. In the long run, yes, we may have to look at the electronic filing system as it will help reduce the missing and misplacing of files at our clinics.”

Maleta advises people to make use of the complaint boxes at facilities to flag bad service and bad staff attitudes.

“We apologise to those who have experienced bad treatment at our facilities,” he says, adding that staff often work in a high-pressure environment. “But we have a campaign called Care of the Carers. To ensure our staff treat patients right, we have to push this campaign.” Through this, healthcare workers receive psycho-social support, he says.

On improving waiting times, Maleta says they will improve the appointment system. “We will no longer be booking too many people on one day because that defeats the whole objective of reducing pressure and ensuring that patients do not spend the whole day at the clinic.”

 

Ritshidze-State-of-Health-Free-State-2022

 

Spotlight article – Patients bear brunt of worsening conditions at some Free State clinics, report shows (Creative Commons Licence)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Free State hospitals: patient waits 7 months for surgery, others sleep in chairs

 

Free State hospitals under strain of rising infections and protests

 

Free State premier unhappy with slow pace of clinic and hospital renovations

 

 

 

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