Africa : Strike Jeopardizes HIV Treatment
on 2010/8/25 10:54:13
Africa

20100824
PlusNews

Johannesburg — A strike for better wages by South African health workers is putting the lives of HIV-positive people on the line as industrial action disrupts treatment programmes.

Services providing antiretroviral (ARV) and tub erculosis (TB) treatment, and prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV are among the programmes disrupted by the public sector strike, which is about to enter its second week.

Local health lobby groups like the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) are trying to ascertain the extent of disruptions nationally, but in townships outside Johannesburg and the capital, Pretoria, the strike has already closed smaller clinics that dispense HIV treatment, and disrupted some of Johannesburg's largest ARV and PMTCT programmes. Disruption of HIV/AIDS programmes have also been reported in Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal provinces in eastern South Africa.

An estimated 1.2 million public sector workers, including nurses and teachers, downed tools on 18 August as wage negotiations stalled. Unions have rejected the government's latest offer and protests are scheduled for Thursday 26 August, with additional unions threatening to join the mass industrial action in solidarity.

Service disrupted, doctors pushed

Johannesburg's Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital treats about 30,000 patients annually. Dr Ashraf Coovadia, head of the hospital's paediatric HIV section, said outpatient services, including antenatal care, were simply not available.

"Women in labour are still being received by the hospital's casualty section but antenatal services - where PMTCT starts - have been shut down," Coovadia told IRIN/PlusNews. "Patients are not getting the medication or services they deserve; they're being turned away."

Staff have been telephoning patients taking HIV and TB medicine to ensure they have sufficient drug supplies to prevent treatment disruptions that could increase the likelihood of drug resistance and treatment failure. Staff have also been arranging to give them their medication at the facility's gates because many patients were too intimidated by striking workers to enter the hospital.

At the Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Hospital, another of the city's large ARV clinics, fear of violence and intimidation by striking workers has also reduced patient attendance, but director Dr Jeff Wing said HIV services had been minimally affected.

South Africa's largest hospital, Chris Hani Baragwanath, has seen the army and police deployed to guarantee service delivery and guard against possible strike-related violence, said hospital spokesperson Nkosiyethu Mazibuko, who maintained that HIV services had not been affected by the strike.

However, health workers who wished to remain anonymous reported that the hospital's pharmacy was understaffed and had been closed most of the time since late last week, with doctors forced to fill their own prescriptions to ensure HIV-positive patients could get top-up supplies of ARVs or TB medication.

The Gauteng provincial government has won a court interdict against striking workers to prohibit acts of intimidation against health workers still reporting for work in and around Johannesburg, but TAC and the Rural Doctors Association of Southern Africa have called on the national government to take further measures to guarantee the provision of essential services while the strike continues.

Previous article - Next article Printer Friendly Page Send this Story to a Friend Create a PDF from the article


Other articles
2023/7/22 15:36:35 - Uncertainty looms as negotiations on the US-Kenya trade agreement proceeds without a timetable
2023/7/22 13:48:23 - 40 More Countries Want to Join BRICS, Says South Africa
2023/7/18 13:25:04 - South Africa’s Putin problem just got a lot more messy
2023/7/18 13:17:58 - Too Much Noise Over Russia’s Influence In Africa – OpEd
2023/7/18 11:15:08 - Lagos now most expensive state in Nigeria
2023/7/18 10:43:40 - Nigeria Customs Intercepts Arms, Ammunition From US
2023/7/17 16:07:56 - Minister Eli Cohen: Nairobi visit has regional and strategic importance
2023/7/17 16:01:56 - Ruto Outlines Roadmap for Africa to Rival First World Countries
2023/7/17 15:47:30 - African heads of state arrive in Kenya for key meeting
2023/7/12 15:51:54 - Kenya, Iran sign five MoUs as Ruto rolls out red carpet for Raisi
2023/7/12 15:46:35 - Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues Gupta Travels to Kenya and Rwanda
2023/7/2 14:57:52 - We Will Protect Water Catchments
2023/7/2 14:53:49 - Kenya records slight improvement in global peace ranking
2023/7/2 13:33:37 - South Sudan, South Africa forge joint efforts for peace in Sudan
2023/7/2 12:08:02 - Tinubu Ready To Assume Leadership Role In Africa
2023/7/2 10:50:34 - CDP ranks Nigeria, others low in zero-emission race
2023/6/19 15:30:00 - South Africa's Ramaphosa tells Putin Ukraine war must end
2023/6/17 15:30:20 - World Bank approves Sh45bn for Kenya Urban Programme
2023/6/17 15:25:47 - Sudan's military govt rejects Kenyan President Ruto as chief peace negotiatorThe Sudanese military government of Abdel Fattah al-Burhan has rejected Kenyan President William Ruto's leadership of the "Troika on Sudan."
2023/6/17 15:21:15 - Kenya Sells Record 2.2m Tonnes of Carbon Credits to Saudi Firms

The comments are owned by the author. We aren't responsible for their content.