Premier halts relocation of frail care patients from Life Esidimeni to NGOs in Port Elizabeth

03 February 2017 - 14:08 By Estelle Ellis
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

Eastern Cape premier Phumulo Masualle has decided that the contract for Life Esidimeni to run the only two fully state-funded frail care centres in Port Elizabeth will be extended by one year.

Eastern Cape Premier Phumulo Masualle. File photo
Eastern Cape Premier Phumulo Masualle. File photo
Image: Eugene Coetzee

This follows a firm response from Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi to halt the proposed move of Port Elizabeth frail care patients to non-government organisations (NGOs) which triggered an uproar last year.

The premier’s announcement represents a complete U-turn following Social Development MEC Nancy Sihlwayi’s bull-headed insistence 24 hours earlier that she would go ahead with the controversial plan to move frail care patients to NGOs despite a damning health ombudsman report on the deaths of mentally ill patients in Gauteng.

  • Some mentally ill patients died just days after leaving Life Healthcare EsidimeniAn elderly woman suffering from schizophrenia and dementia spent 58 years as a patient at Life Healthcare Esidimeni. She died just 19 days after being transferred to an NGO in Gauteng. 

The Thursday decision followed what Masualle’s spokeswoman‚ Nonala Ndlozu‚ described as a “hectic cabinet meeting” that lasted until after 5pm.

“The premier will confirm that he had a conversation with the national Minister of Health‚ Aaron Motsoaledi‚ and that they have decided the best approach will be to extend the [Life Esidimeni] contract‚” Ndlozu‚ said.

  • High level task team visits NGOs to prepare for the transfer of mental health patientsA government task team has started its preparation for the relocation of mental health patients in Gauteng‚ currently being cared for by NGOs. 

“In the next year‚ they will find the best way forward for both the department and the frail care patients.”

Health ombudsman Professor Malegapuru Makgoba found earlier this week that the Gauteng health department was negligent when it moved 1900 patients from Life Healthcare facilities to private homes run by unlicensed NGOs‚ calling the plan reckless‚ unwise and flawed.

This story appeared in The Herald .

subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now