Photo: Health Ombudsman, Prof Malegapuru Mokgoba at the release of his report on conditions at RMMCH
The investigation started in April last year after a member of Parliament’s Health Portfolio Committee lodged a complaint with the Health Ombud about the conditions at the facility.
Soon afterwards, RMMCH was catapulted into the public eye with a video that circulated on social media showing heavily pregnant women sleeping on the hospital floors. This was followed by an open letter to the Department of Health by paediatric gastroenterologist, Dr Tim de Maayer in which he exposed the horrific conditions at the hospital, causing his much-publicised suspension and subsequent reinstatement.
Reading like a horror story, the report corroborates complaints by patients and doctors working at the facility of a dirty, filthy, unsafe and overcrowded hospital led by a seemingly incompetent CEO who spent more time at home than at the hospital. It also revealed that a staff member responsible for theatres mixed her own concoctions when medicine stocks ran out, leading to infections.
Expressing his shock at the conditions that the investigating team found during a site visit including patients sleeping on the floor, seeping sewerage, broken pipes and filthy toilets, Prof Makgoba, related his experiences as a medical student when Rahima Moosa, then called Coronation Hospital, was one of the most sought-after training- and treating hospitals in the country.
Prof Mokgoba also referred to a detailed report compiled by Profs Ashraf Coovadia and Hennie Lombaard in 2017 titled “An Unsafe Hospital” of which the recommendations on how the problems should be addressed, were never considered or implemented.
During the Health Ombuds investigation, 34 people were interviewed including Dr de Maayer and some of his colleagues that provided “irrevocable evidence of the complaints received,” Prof Makgoba said.
The main findings of the report include that:
“During the investigation, the most striking thing has been the fact that the hospital has been neglected to such an extent, in almost all respects, for several years. Senior managers were found to exhibit a significant lack of discipline and manipulative behaviours, while the callousness and apparent disregard for human safety is chilling which is evident in the dire lack of resources for a hospital providing critical tertiary level specialist services in the 21st century,” Prof Mokgaba noted.
“Overall, the Gauteng Health Department is in a mess and the criteria used by the department to select hospital CEOs are far below the required standard for such senior positions and monitoring and evaluation systems are weak,” he added.
Recommendations
Recommendations in the report include that the Premier should ensure that RMMCH is one of the first hospitals to be refurbished and that immediate consideration should be given to the collapsing sewage system, leaking steam pipes, dilapidated buildings, and unkempt surrounding areas within the hospital perimeter. It is also advised that the GDoH and the hospital institute a disciplinary inquiry against the former CEO for her failure to ensure that functional systems were in place, flouting standard HR practices and failure to manage her leave according to her legal obligations.
Other recommendations include:
A comprehensive implementation plan is to be submitted to the Ombudsman within six months providing detailed realistic strategies, time frames, and names, designations and contact details of persons responsible for implementation.
Speaking after the media briefing, Gauteng Health MEC Nomantu Nokomo-Ralehoko welcomed the release of the report and said she was studying it to consolidate an implementation plan to address the issues raised by the Ombudsman.