
Social innovation is the catalyst for improving SA healthcare
South Africa’s social innovators are already tackling some of our most deeply entrenched healthcare challenges.

Gauteng Health MEC Gwen Ramokgopa said the that a forensic audit had found that the contracts, which were supposed to run from October 2014 to September 2016, had not been properly handled and yet were still running.
This was made known in a written reply to the members of the legislature. The contracts cover 34 hospitals and 188 clinics, and cost R525 million for two years.
Former Health MEC Qedani Mahlangu admitted that the 16 companies awarded the contracts should not have been awarded them according to the findings of a forensic audit.
In her statement Ramokgopa said according to legal advice the Department had given the implicated companies an opportunity to make representations. One of the companies abandoned the site before the investigation could be finalised and another was exonerated.
According to Ramokgopa, the senior official responsible for signing the contracts was dismissed and police had laid criminal charges against him. Disciplinary action was also taken against another four officials that sat in on the bid committee that awarded the contracts.
“My concern is that 16 security companies that should not have qualified for these security contracts are still guarding hospitals and clinics nine months after the original two-year contract expired,” said Jack Bloom of the Democratic Alliance.
He added “The Department claims that they could not get money back from the companies because legally they had provided services.”
The Department’s security costs have more than doubled in the last four years.
Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Hospital security costs are the highest of all the Gauteng hospitals, costing R33 million a year. – Health-e News.
Thabo Molelekwa joined OurHealth citizen journalists project in 2013 and went on to become an intern reporter in 2015. Before joining Health-e News, Thabo was a member of the Treatment Action Campaign’s Vosloorus branch. He graduated from the Tshwane University of Technology with a diploma in Computer Systems and started his career at Discovery Health as a claims assessor. In 2016 he was named an International HIV Prevention Reporting Fellow with the International Centre for Journalists and was a finalist in the Discovery Health Journalism Awards competition in 2016 and 2017 respectively. Thabo also completed a feature writing course at the University of Cape Town in 2016. In 2017 he became a News reporter , he is currently managing the Citizen Journalism programme.You can follow him on @molelekwa98

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by Thabo Molelekwa, Health-e News
August 10, 2017
South Africa’s social innovators are already tackling some of our most deeply entrenched healthcare challenges.
The government is implementing the Adolescent and Youth-Friendly Services, or Youth Zones, where learners wearing school uniforms are fast-tracked.
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