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Dysfunctional hospitals: presentation to HRC

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Research at Chris Hani Baragwanath hospital. Transformation advisers to ... other departments, clean floors, take a trolley to fetch food and dish up, all ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dysfunctional hospitals: presentation to HRC


1
Dysfunctional hospitals presentation to HRC
  • NALEDI
  • May 2007

2
NALEDI
  • COSATU research/policy institute
  • Research at Chris Hani Baragwanath hospital
  • Transformation advisers to labour management
  • Research into 8 public hospitals for DPSA
  • Transformation consultants at CHB
  • Research/knowledge from below

3
Research results
  • Dysfunctional management structures
  • Underfunding understaffing
  • Public hospitals are stressed institutions
  • Impact on clinical outcomes

4
Understaffing
  • National public health staff
  • 235 000 (1994)
  • 213,000 (2004)
  • 225,000 (2006)
  • Redistribution from hospitals to clinics
  • Regional Hospital staff shortages
  • 24-31 shortages (three cases)
  • 0-6 shortages (three cases)

5
Understaffing tertiary hospitals
  • Johannesburg General
  • 23 understaffed all staff (1100 posts)
  • 28 understaffed nurses (500 posts)
  • Chris Hani Baragwanath
  • 52 understaffed all staff (5200 posts)
  • 46 understaffed nurses (1750 posts)
  • CHB staff establishment is 7500
  • funded posts are 4800 (36 understaffed)
  • CHB Surgical Division
  • 251 permanent nursing staff
  • 158 agency nurses (39)

6
Dysfunctional structures
  • Head office does not have the necessary
    competence to do their tasks. They do not know
    what is happening on the ground. More powers is
    precisely what is required, especially for HR and
    finance. CEO
  • When we meet with management we complain about
    the shortage of staff, the linen, cleaners - they
    tell us to try your best! Its a joke! They come
    with no solutions. Who do we cry to? We never see
    the head of nursing. We never see the CEO. We
    never see the clinical head. (Professional
    Nurses)

7
  • The budget is meaningless, it bears no relation
    to operational activity. (Clinical Head)
  • No-one takes responsibility. CPN
  • We have reached the ceiling, there is nowhere
    for us to go. There is no recognition and no
    incentive. - In-charge CPN

8
Staff shortages
  • Our patients are helpless. Others come and go, I
    remain. I must skip my tea. I have to jump, to
    rush time - I must stop washing and serve tea. If
    there are no ward attendants I must make tea
    myself. Theres no point in washing the patient
    and giving medications, but failing to feed him.
    You cannot leave the patient with an empty
    stomach. Again, how can you leave a sick person
    in a wet bed and go for lunch? - NA

9
  • We always have to rush we wash, we medicate,
    we move on. You miss some things. You cannot
    listen to the patient. You cannot implement
    things that would improve health care and staff
    morale. We also have to do inventory, push
    patients to other departments, clean floors, take
    a trolley to fetch food and dish up, all because
    there is a shortage of support staff. Nurses
    resign, die, retire, and they cannot be replaced.
    You cannot have tea, you cannot eat. We become
    demotivated and no longer have empathy.
  • -- group of CPNs

10
  • The biggest change since democracy is a shortage
    of staff - Nurse
  • People resist working properly through
    frustration at unreasonable workload. Staff
    shortages cause aggression. - Matron
  • We sometimes only do the most critical patients.
    Sometimes we just top and tail patients instead
    of giving them a full wash. - In-charge nurse
  • Im the worst, Im the Atlas carrying the ward.
    We have to ignore the rules we were taught in our
    training. - NA

11
Clinical care
  • Everything is done in a rush and staff are left
    exhausted, resulting in avoidable morbidity and
    mortality. CHB clinicians
  • We have had cases of wound sepsis because we
    have nothing to wash our hands with. CPN
  • Recently shortages caused a patient who needed
    turning to get bedsores. This led to
    complications and then the patients death. CPN

12
Recommendations
  • Recommendations sent to January 2006 Cabinet
    Lekgotla
  • Cabinet accepts recommendations
  • Gauteng MEC implements
  • Piloting at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital
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