Title: UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN
1UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN
Submission to SAHRC
Faculty of Health Sciences
2HEALTH AS A HUMAN RIGHT
PHC as social justice
SOUTH AFRICA Health as a right social
justice health equity Constitution Health Law
and Policy
PGWC HEALTH Service
Statutory Councils MRC Research
Health Regulatory Bodies DoE, DoH, HPCSA Teaching
and training
UCT FACULTY OF HEALTH SCIENCES Activities,
operations, resources
3Quality of Health Care
- Black people in this country did not strive for
equal access to mediocrity, they strove for equal
access to excellence - Mamphele RampheleFormer VC UCT
- membership of the health care profession
includes the responsibility for dealing with
people who are in a dependent, vulnerable,
exploitable state of weakened humanity - Desmond Tutu, 1977
- We have appeared too tolerant of mediocrity
- Affirming excellence and challenging mediocrity
Naledi Pandor 2007
4Quality of Health Care
- We owe our population an excellent health service
- Quality health care is a human right
5Excellence in Health Care
- High degree of expertise at all levels of care
- Primary care clinical staff
- Specialist clinical staff
- Super and sub-specialist staff
- Appropriate facilities at all levels
- Excellent training to provide the service
personnel - Excellent research to maintain clinical services
at the cutting edge
6Health Care in the Western Cape
- Currently a true centre of excellence
- Three academic hospitals providing high standards
of health care at all levels - One of the few areas in the country where a full
spectrum of sub-specialist care and training is
available to indigent patients - One of the few areas in the country where
sub-specialist training is available across the
spectrum - Accounts for the production of 30 of all medical
graduates and over 30 of all specialists in SA
as well as other African students - Critical national resource
- Excellent health care in South Africa depends on
excellent health services in the Western Cape
7PHC - The Facultys lead theme
- Philosophy of health equity
- Directed at comprehensive health care which is
- Universally accessible
- Affordable by state and communities
- Demands full community participation
- Includes promotion, prevention, cure and
rehabilitation - Delivery through multidisciplinary teams
- Seamless connection between all levels of care
8This means that .
- Our academic service platform for teaching and
research must include all levels of care - Primary (first contact), e.g. Vanguard,
Khayelitsha - Secondary, e.g Somerset, Victoria, GF Jooste,
Vredendal - Tertiary, e.g Sub-specialist services at GSH and
RXH - Nationally Unique Quaternary, e.g. liver
transplantation (GSH and RXH national referral
centres) - All of these levels of care must be maintained in
a productive and sustainable condition
9Our relationship with PGWC
- Aligned with goal of health equity
- Based on the principle of the indivisibility of
teaching, research and service - Governed by Joint Agreement (1966) which
determines - Academic service platform for teaching, training,
research and service delivery - Conditions of service for staff
- Managed through
- Joint Standing Advisory Committee (JSAC)
- Joint Management Teams (JMT) for central
hospitals, psychiatric hospitals and district - Operating principle
- Agree to share plans, strategies and budgets that
influence academic health sciences
10Factors impacting on our relationship
- National recognition that tertiary care is an
essential component of health equity expressed
through - Modernisation of Tertiary Services plan
- Financing of tertiary care at central hospitals
through conditional grants - National human resource policy and plan for
academic health sciences - Requires provision for training of increased
numbers of health personnel - Budgetary pressures
11Desirable position
- MTS implemented with appropriate funding for
tertiary and quaternary services from national
government - Conditional grants sufficient for delivery of
tertiary and quaternary care, taking into a/c
increased pressure on service (HIV/AIDS, urban
migration, etc) - National human resource policy (doubling of
numbers) linked to adequate funding - National plan for academic health sciences and
provincial joint agreement both acknowledge the
importance of a joint staff - Provincial Comprehensive Services Plan and budget
based on full participation
12The reality
- Modernisation of Tertiary Services plan
- Financing of tertiary care at central hospitals
through conditional grants - National human resource policy
- Plan for academic health sciences
- Provincial Comprehensive Services Plan
- The provincial budget
- Joint agreement
- Policy suspended
- Not sufficient
-
- No additional budget
- Some hope for funding from DoE
- Limited participation by HEIs
- Insufficient for health equity
- Stalemate
13The Reality
- Economic migration to the Western Cape
- Health migration
- Massive and unfunded burden on health services
- Increased logistical teaching and training
problems - PHC requires far more extensive teaching and
service sites - Increasing costs of care also lead to increased
training costs (unfunded) - Shrinking budgets in real terms
- Decreasing health service platform
14Budget problems
- Three sources of health funding for academic
complexes - Provincial equitable share
- Health Professions training and development grant
(HPTDG) - National tertiary services grant (NTSG)
- Provincial equitable share takes no account of
health migration - Western Cape provides approximately 34 of budget
to health in 2007 - HPTDG does not compensate for the heavy training
burden of the Western Cape - NTSG has decreased in real terms despite
increasing demand
15The Challenge
- Provision of adequate primary and secondary level
care - Western Cape is particularly deficient in
secondary level services - Maintenance of tertiary and quaternary services
- Maintenance of teaching and research at adequate
levels
16 - Reduction in all service posts since 1995
17Service teaching posts have been falling since
1990
18Major pressures on teaching services
- Compliance with HPCSA means we must develop and
resource off-campus teaching sites, and get our
students there - Increased demand on the health service means
clinical teachers have less time for teaching
(and research) - Decrease in budget means
- Decrease in beds and in quality of care (patient
delays) - Fewer nurses and less theatre time means fewer
procedures meet requirements of specialist
training
19Comprehensive Service Plan (2010) Tertiary Beds
20Current Demand
- PGWC figures indicated that there were 15 million
primary care contacts last year - On the basis of the proposed ratios of 90 1º, 8
2º and 2 3º this would require approximately
2000 beds at tertiary level - At present there insufficient beds to meet the
demand, supporting this figure - The CSP is budget driven, not needs driven
- Health in the Western Cape is massively
underfunded
21Average waiting times for surgery
- Cardiac bypass surgery (gt 6 weeks)
- Cataracts (gt 1 year, gt 1000 cataracts)
- Joint replacements (gt3 ½ years, gt700 patients)
- Colon cancer (gt 2months)
- Breast cancer (gt 6 weeks)
222010 Health Care Plan proposes further staff
reductions
23Further budget problems in 2007
- R30 million from budget of two academic hospitals
GSH TBH - Revenue generated from fee paying patients
absorbed by centre (further R19mill removed from
GSH budget) - Closure of 60 beds
- Ability to train UG and particularly PG students
further hampered
24Healthcare 2010
- The Faculty supports the philosophy underlying
Healthcare 2010 and the Comprehensive Service
Plan - A milestone in re-shaping the provincial health
service to promote equity and allow greater
access to healthcare within the context of
affordability and sustainability - However, the service reductions envisaged in the
current budget and the CSP will have a
significant effect on services at a secondary and
tertiary level and on research, teaching and
training, the mandate of the Faculty
25Comments 2010
- Consequences of implementation not calculated or
explicitly stated - Reduction of level 3 without corresponding
building of other levels - Rigid separation of levels of care need
continuum of service - Patients and illnesses not readily classifiable
into levels (HIV) - Support strengthening of service across platform
not at expense of tertiary
26The dilemma
- Inadequate budget for the province
- Equitable share
- HPTDG
- NTSG
- Need to develop and support primary and secondary
services - Need to maintain existing scarce resources in the
tertiary and quaternary services
27Impact on tertiary services
- Good PHC System requires strong primary,
secondary and tertiary level services components - More patients seen at primary level means more
referrals up to, secondary tertiary care - Unethical to have patients referred upwards and
not have personnel, resources to be able to treat
them - More pap smears at primary level more women
requiring surgery - Earlier surgery means cheaper, more effective care
28Impact on teaching
- Teaching and training dependent on adequate
clinical platform - Access to real patients in clinical settings
backbone of clinical training in UG and PG
contexts (apprenticeship) - Clinical training begins in third year of MBChB
- 800 undergraduate students from UCT need to be
accommodated on platform - Total number of beds required 1480 and 400
anaesthetic events - Many patients too ill to have students examine
them
29Training of Registrars in Surgical disciplines
- Based on apprenticeship need to enhance skills
in theatre - Reduction in theatre time less time for
training - Reduction in numbers of registrars impact on
services (patients with life-threatening
illnesses cannot be treated in time) impact on
numbers of specialist trained impact on medical
students training - High levels of trauma beds not available
(specialists and registrars spend time looking
for beds)
30The education budgetFunding of Health Sciences
Education
- Two funding streams
- DoE higher education subsidy (all students at
HEIs) - DoH Health Professions Training and Development
Grant (HPTDG) channelled through the provincial
health departments and - DoH National tertiary Services Grant
- Not enough!
- Conference May 2004 on funding of Health Sciences
Education - FFC research, HESA intervention with Minister of
Education - Agreement from DOE that R8m be set aside to
investigate special grant through DOE to
universities for health sciences education - Further funds to be announced
31To be effective, we need reassurance that
- The health budget will provide for an adequate
academic health service platform - The education budget will provide for adequate
health sciences education - Our inputs into health service planning will be
taken seriously - There will be effective governance of academic
health sciences - The joint agreement will acknowledge the
importance of a joint staff
32Health service planning
- Submissions on health plan 2010
- Request for further involvement
- National intervention?
33The Faculty of Health Sciences at UCT commitments
- Equity in health (adoption of PHC philosophy as
Lead Theme) - Training health professionals responsive to needs
of country - Human rights (adoption of Faculty Charter,
curricula transformation, sites of teaching) - Partnerships with others (PGWC, other HEIs, NGOs
and other sectors) - Provision of healthcare at most appropriate level
of care
34About the Faculty
- Educate and develop quality health care personnel
- Trains UG and PG students in audiology, dietetics
and nutrition, OT, physiotherapy, medical
sciences, speech language pathology and medicine - 1742 UG students (1145 in medicine) and 1173 PG
students (353 registrars) - Striving to ensure demographic profile
approximates that of population - In 2006 the MBChB student population comprised
34 African, 31.6 white, 18.7 Coloured and 15
Indian with 38 male and 62 female
35Transformation of our Student Body (UG)
2003
1994
36Primary Health Care Systems
- Take account of broader issues, income, housing
etc - Create conditions for effective provision of
services to poor - Organise integrated and seamless care from
primary to tertiary levels of care with
patients treated at most effective level of care
eg Obstetrics and neonatal services - Link promotion, prevention, acute and chronic
care and rehabilitation across all components of
the health system - Continuously evaluate and strive to improve
performance
37The Threats
- Progressive erosion of services at secondary and
tertiary levels has impaired ability to provide
adequate service to people of Western Cape - Right of access to healthcare impacted
- Potentially irreversible destruction of major
healthcare assets
38Possible solutions
- Urgent national review of health funding policies
- Education
- Tertiary and quaternary services funding
- National policy on the status of Joint staff
- National policy on centralising and equitable
funding of advanced health care training
39Conclusions
- Access to quality health care is a human right
- Primary
- Secondary
- Tertiary
- Health in the Western Cape is underfunded
- National government must urgently reconsider
health funding in a broad context