Bibi-Aisha Wadvalla

Boitumelo Regional staff bring hospital to a standstill

Nurses back at work at Boitumelo Hospital  

  Nurses have ended their strike at Boitumelo Regional Hospital. They downed tools last week over safety issues, overtime and staff shortages. The National Health Department (NDoH) says the strike ended after a meeting between unions and the provincial health department on Monday. “The Free State Department of Health has made phenomenal progress on many of the concerns tabled by union representatives during engagements with the management of the Department,” says NDoH. Meetings between senior management and union representatives at Boitumelo Regional Hospital will continue to outline the progress in addressing their concerns. The department adds that the concerns raised were already being attended to. It says air-conditioners in three of the five theatres were repaired. The remaining two units were ordered. An air-conditioner was installed in the maternity theatre. A broken generator, a leaking roof and five cold rooms were also repaired. The NDoH added that there are currently

Photo by Levi Guzman on Unsplash

People with light skin are at higher risk of skin cancer. How to reduce sun exposure

By Caradee Yael Wright, South African Medical Research Council Most skin cancers are caused by too much exposure to the sun – specifically solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation or rays. These can damage the cells in the skin and cause them to mutate. This causes skin cancer. Melanoma is the most fatal kind of skin cancer. The risk of skin cancer depends on a few things, including family history, lifestyle (such as spending a lot of time outdoors), a personal history of skin cancer and skin pigment. Other factors include skin that burns easily, having a large number of moles and older age. A big factor in skin cancer risk is skin pigment. This is called melanin. Melanin is like a natural sunscreen that protects us from the sun’s harmful UV rays. Exposure to the sun is the most important risk factor for skin cancer. People who are deeply pigmented (dark

World Aids Day: Injectable PrEP will change the game in SA

HIV remains a leading killer in Africa despite medical breakthroughs – how to eliminate it

 Written by Salim Abdool Karim, Centre for the AIDS Program of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA) About 38 million people around the world are living with HIV. About 70% of them live in Africa. This shows that there is no solution to the AIDS pandemic without a solution in Africa. In 2021, there were 1.5 million new cases of HIV – just over 4,000 cases per day around the world. At the same time, close to 700,000 people died. The big challenge is to address the dual realities of people still dying from HIV in large numbers, and the large numbers of new infections. The upside is that there is a clear plan with clear goals on how to address this. In 2016, countries came together at the United Nations to agree on what the world’s strategy should be. The goal is to end AIDS as a public health threat

SA welcomes launch of new TB Vaccine Accelator Council

COVID-19 spurs WHO on to explore novel TB vaccines

  South Africa has welcomed the news that the World Health Organisation (WHO) plans to launch a new TB Vaccine Accelerator Council. The National Department of Health says it’s a critical step in the journey to end tuberculosis. Director-General of the World Health Organisation, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, revealed the plans at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Aligned towards one goal The Council will facilitate the licensing and use of effective novel TB vaccines catalysing high-level alignment between funders, global agencies, governments, and end users in identifying and overcoming barriers to TB vaccine development. “The Council is an important structure that could put in place enabling factors to find a TB vaccine to effectively protect against pulmonary tuberculosis. That step is critical in the journey to end TB,” said health department spokesman, Foster Mohale. Ghebreyesus said COVID-19 revealed that innovative health interventions could be delivered fast if politically prioritised

Surgery backlog growing by the day at Bara

Copper pipe theft closes Bara ICU

The main intensive care unit at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital was forced to shut down on Monday after a copper pipe that supplies oxygen to the ward was stolen. In a statement, the Gauteng Health Department said the theft endangered the lives of 24 patients in the main ICU at that time. Nineteen of those patients were on life support and receiving oxygen through artificial ventilation. 10-metre copper pipe stolen The theft was discovered after doctors noticed the flow of oxygen was lower than normal in various sections of the ICU. They informed the Gauteng Department of Infrastructure Development, responsible for the plant room where the copper cable was located. The patients were immediately moved to another ward where oxygen supply was unaffected and ventilation was continued. Main ICU expected to reopen Wednesday “A contractor was immediately called on site and the copper pipe has since been replaced. The

Societal enablers: Our No 1 weapon in HIV fight

Unfriendly services keep HIV patients away from Free State clinics 

This year’s World AIDS day theme of “Equalise and integrate to end AIDS” was a call to action to end the pandemic across the country – and we should start at the frontline of service delivery.  Critical to the HIV response is the 95-95-95 global targets. These targets mean 95% of people living with HIV should know their status, 95% of people diagnosed with HIV receive sustained antiviral therapy, and 95% of all people receiving antiviral therapy should have viral suppression by 2025.  The South African HIV response is off track to meet these targets, with progress towards the second target being the worst. According to the latest UNAIDS data, South Africa is on 94-78-89, which means 94% of people living with HIV know their status, only 78% of those diagnosed are on HIV treatment, and 89% of those on therapy are virally suppressed.  Free State PLHIV face many challenges.

Even superheroes need a helping hand

This year has seen the release of many superhero movies – Thor: Love and Thunder, The Batman, Dr Strange and now, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Most superhero movies have a common theme – the superhero defeats the villain and saves the day. But who looks after them when their health is at risk? As we recognise Men’s Health Awareness Month in November, Sanlam’s Dr Calvin Yagan believes it is an ideal opportunity to understand better the “superhero complex” and how it affects our daily lives. The superhero complex is a recognised psychological state where a person believes they cannot fail and that it is their duty to ‘fix’ everyone else’s problems. Whether you can relate to this trait in yourself or in a loved one, it is important to realise that without prioritising your own care, you cannot continue taking care of others indefinitely. Even the most steadfast of

SAHPRA confirms COVID-19 jab related death

Second J&J vaccine fatality recorded

The SA Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) confirmed that another person died from Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) after receiving the Johnson & Johnson (J&J) Covid-19 vaccine. SAPHRA confirmed the first GBS death early last month. In a statement released Monday, SAHPRA said the National Immunisation Safety Expert Committee (NISEC) did a causality assessment of the reported case using the World Health Organization’s (WHO) methodology. The death was classified as a vaccine product-related event. GBS is a very rare but potentially severe neurological adverse event associated with administering various vaccines and other medicines. Some bacterial or viral infections, including SARS-CoV-2 can also trigger it, said SAHPRA. Investigations ongoing “Investigations and causality assessment of all reported severe AEFI with the COVID-19 Vaccine Janssen and other COVID-19 vaccines are ongoing. The outcomes of these investigations and causality assessments will be shared with the public as soon as they are completed.” Previous investigations by regulatory

Blaze at Steve Biko Academic Hospital 30 May 2022

Steve Biko Academic Hospital: No staff or patients injured during blaze

No patients or staff were injured during a fire that happened outside the casualty area at the Steve Biko Academic Hospital in Pretoria in the early hours of Monday morning. The Gauteng Department of Health said the fire broke out in a wendy house used as a temporary storage area for medical waste. The structure was also used as an “in-transit corpse” area. The department said the hospital was operating as usual and that the fire affected none of its services. Nobody was injured in the blaze, which broke out after 1 AM. Staff extinguished fire “The fire which affected temporary structures at the facility was successfully put out by the SBAH hospital team, using the fire extinguishers on site,” the department said in a statement released on Monday morning. The department said 18 patients and one corpse in separate temporary structures close to where the fire broke out had

New HIV variant: South Africans don't need to panic

SA detects first case of Lassa fever in 15 years

The National Institute of Communicable Diseases has reported the detection of an imported case of Lassa fever in South Africa, the first since 2007. In a statement released on Friday night, the NICD said a man with an extensive history of travel in Nigeria fell sick soon after returning to South Africa. He was admitted to Pietermaritzburg Hospital where he died. Lassa fever is a viral infection that is endemic to the West African countries and mostly reported in Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea, and Nigeria. Up to 300 000 cases of Lassa fever, with about 5000 deaths, are recorded annually in the endemic countries. Currently, there is no vaccine for Lassa fever. Lassa fever Kills 149 in Four Months, Says NCDC https://t.co/mXYiFMMsqQ — Medicalworld Nigeria (@MedicalworldNig) May 13, 2022 A species of rodent called the multimammate rat is the natural host of the virus that causes Lassa fever. The rats

Pfizer vaccine efficacy lower against omicron

Discovery study finds Pfizer vaccine lowers risk of hospitalisation

Discovery Health has released its research on the effectiveness of two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech vaccination in preventing severe disease and hospitalisation by the Omicron variant. The study was carried out by Discovery Health’s actuarial team in collaboration with scientists at the South African Medical Research Council. The analysis includes more than 211 000 COVID-19 test results, 41% from adult members who had received two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Approximately 78 000 of these COVID-19 test results were attributed to Omicron infections over the period 15 November 2021 to 7 December 2021. “We used a test-negative design methodology to establish the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine’s real-world effectiveness against hospital admission from Omicron infection,” said Shirley Collie, Chief Health Analytics Actuary at Discovery Health. The findings of the study were reviewed by scientists at the SAMRC Pfizer vaccine protects against Omicron The two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech vaccination provides 70% protection against severe complications of COVID-19 requiring

Inequalities put children at higher risk of HIV

Children will pay the ultimate price as inequalities continue to drive the HIV epidemic, warns UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore. Last year 120,000 children died from Aids-related illnesses. And 300,000 children were newly infected. This is according to UNICEF’s latest HIV and Aids Global Snapshot. “Unless we ramp up efforts to resolve the inequalities driving the HIV epidemic, which are now exacerbated by COVID-19, we may see more children infected with HIV and more children losing their fight against AIDS,” said Fore. Inequalities are deepening The report warns the prolonged COVID-19 pandemic is deepening the inequalities that have long driven the HIV epidemic. This has made it difficult for vulnerable children, pregnant women, and breastfeeding mothers to access HIV prevention and treatment services. “The HIV epidemic enters its fifth decade amid a global pandemic that has overloaded health care systems and constrained access to life-saving services. Meanwhile, rising poverty, mental

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