Health workers across the Western Cape and Eastern Cape are struggling with a surge in coronavirus patients as the country hurtles towards an expected disease peak in July.
“The numbers have been increasing daily – we don’t have enough space” said a casualty nurse at Livingstone Hospital, one of the three Covid-designated facilities in Eastern Cape.
She claimed the hospital was suffering a lack of personal protective equipment (PPE), back-to-back shifts and chaotic management.
“Last time I went on duty I got eight gloves,” she told AFP. “How do I work with eight pairs of gloves for a 12-hour shift?”
Coronavirus is pushing already-ailing hospitals in one of South Africa’s poorest provinces to the brink.
Infections
The Eastern Cape has recorded the third-highest number of coronavirus infections in South Africa, accounting for nearly one in seven cases.
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Health officials claim the disease spread from neighbouring Western Cape province, home to almost 60% of cases and around three-quarters of registered deaths.
The two provinces together have a population of 13.5 million out of a national population of 58 million.
In East London, one doctor felt hospitals were under-equiped to handle both coronavirus and their usual flow of patients.
South Africa imposed strict confinement measures and banned the sale of alcohol in March to buy time for healthcare facilities to gear up for the pandemic.
But emergency wards have been swamped by a resurgence of trauma cases since booze sales resumed on 1 June, prompting Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane to call for the ban to be reinstated.
“It’s hard to say whether we will be able to handle it,” said the unnamed doctor, who voiced particular concern about the lack of ventilators and coronavirus training.
Crippled
“It is already a crippled system so it’s difficult… to prepare for a pandemic.”
At least five health facilities across the Eastern Cape have been affected by strike action or closed for decontamination after staff tested positive this month, according to South African hospital union Hospersa.
Provincial health spokesperson Sizwe Kupelo blasted hospital staff for playing “politics” and shutting down wards unnecessarily.
“This is a global pandemic and I have not heard of any country where after each and every positive case, health workers demand that the hospitals should close down,” he told AFP.
READ | Eastern Cape health workers wait up to one month for Covid-19 test results
Kupelo said over 200 health workers had tested positive for Covid-19 in Eastern Cape, many of who he believed contracted the virus outside medical facilities.
Meanwhile, hospitals in the Western Cape have been battling with the brunt of the country’s epidemic.
“We have definitely had a lot more patients coming in,” said an emergency doctor at a small district hospital outside Cape Town.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, she worried about a growing number of patients forced to spend the night on plastic chairs due to lack of beds.
“Every time I try to transfer a patient to ICU at our referring hospital they tell me they are full,” she said.
‘Very tough’
“It’s going to get very very tough,” she feared. “We only have so many oxygen ports and having to decide who gets them: that’s what terrifies me.”
Nurses in Western Cape also fretted about over-stretched facilities and being unduly exposed to the virus.
“There is no way we can put patients 1.5 metres away from each other,” said a nurse at Tygerberg hospital.
“We feel very unsafe,” she added.
“Last week we were assisting doctors with intubation in a room that had no extractor fans.”
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This week, a nurse who contracted Covid-19 sents an open letter complaining to Health Minister Zweli Mkhize.
“Ever since the virus set foot in the… (Western Cape) we are working non-stop at my hospital,” wrote Beverley McGee, who works for a private clinic in Cape Town.
“Us nurses are emotionally drained, overwhelmed with anger, anxiety, fear, stress and disappointment.”
Western Cape health minister spokesperson Nomawethu Sbukwana assured the province was “ready for the influx of cases”, with field hospitals opened to “deal with the peak”.
Spreads
But as coronavirus spreads deeper into the country, some rural facilities have also started sounding alarm bells.
“Suddenly everyone just started coming back positive,” said a doctor at Nompumelelo Hospital in the Eastern Cape town of Peddie.
“For small hospitals like ours that service populations in the middle of nowhere… support is very scant.”
The doctor said the hospital, which serves a district of over 67 000 people, had grappled to secure PPE deliveries and proper guidance from health authorities.
“We are going to struggle a lot… if we try to portray this picture of serenity,” he warned.
“The Eastern Cape is vulnerable, it is a very rural province. We need to be very honest with ourselves, and I think that’s where our government needs to wake up.”