Government loves to boast that South Africa runs the world’s largest HIV treatment programme. But when treatment starts with a test, is the country really getting it right? A leaked report shows we have a long way to go.
A leaked report reveals shocking new details about the quality of HIV testing services in many parts of the country, including an instance in which one clinic may have been using three-year expired materials.
The document is the result of a national Aids council-commissioned study to evaluate the quality of HIV-testing services supported by the international donor, the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria. As part of this, researchers visited facilities as patients and tested for HIV at 47 clinics or mobile testing units in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), Limpopo, Mpumalanga, North West and Free State.
Although the study wasn’t large enough to present a picture of testing services nationally, it revealed what researcher Tian Johnson described as, “a tale of two worlds”.
Some clinics – particularly in prisons – performed particularly well.
But many other facilities flouted safety precautions, were forced to operate from tents that literally blew away halfway through test procedures or discriminated against some people who sought testing. Some activists say they see this kind of discrimination frequently, especially against the LGBTIQ+ community.
Mobile units go flying mid-test
Almost one out of four sites weren’t storing testing kits in temperature-controlled rooms, the document – that was circulated among select HIV organisations earlier this year – reveals. Some mobile testing units did not have any way to ensure kits were kept at the right temperatures, while some left cooler bags open through the entire testing process amid temperatures in excess of 35 degrees Celsius.
None of the five brands of rapid tests that are widely used at clinics in the country should be exposed to heat around 30 degrees Celsius, according to guidelines quoted in the report.
In two provinces – KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga – testing tents, as well as consent forms with patients’ names, were blown away as the study’s researchers tested for HIV. At one site in Mpumalanga, a nurse and driver had to try to physically prevent the tent from flying away during the test procedure, while structures in another area of the province collapsed so frequently that nurses started to warn community members about it in advance.
Disturbingly, one site in KwaZulu-Natal was in the possession of fluid used in HIV testing that had expired in July 2016. The fluid is added to blood samples during testing to produce the final result. When researchers brought the situation to the nurse’s attention, the staff member assured them that people providing testing services knew to always check the expiry date.
Bhekisisa has been told that a second survey conducted among the country’s other four provinces also exists but this has not been made public.
‘A contravention of the covenant with God’
The experience of going for HIV testing could be even worse among those who need it most, including sex workers, men who have sex with men, and other members of the LGBTIQ+ community.
As part of the study, researchers role-played with healthcare workers – pretending to be, for instance, a sex worker looking for HIV testing and counselling. They found that, even in cases where workers had been on sensitisation courses, they still stigmatised these groups.
In some instances, workers refused to speak about anal sex and told researchers that having more than one sexual partner was “a contravention of the covenant with God”.
Anal sex is the riskiest form of sex for contracting HIV, says the US Centers for Disease Control. This is because the rectum has a thin lining that can easily tear during sexual intercourse, making it easy for HIV to enter the body.
This, as well as a lack of access to health services, puts men who have sex with men at a high risk to contract HIV. A 2009 study conducted by Wits University and the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC), found that HIV prevalence rates among men who have sex with men were double those of the general population, according to research published in the journal AIDS & Behavior.
Fear of being stigmatised
High rates of HIV infections among sex workers, men who have sex with men, young women, and inmates make these groups – also known as key populations – focuses of the country’s latest HIV plan. With this strategy, South Africa hopes to ensure that 80% of people in vulnerable groups like these know their HIV status by 2021/2022, and that at least 80% are on treatment.
But a 2003 study, conducted by Unisa in Tshwane, showed that fear of being stigmatised can prevent high-risk groupsfrom accessing healthcare. More than one-out-of-10 of the nearly 500 LGBTIQ+ community members surveyed by Unisa said they’d avoided seeking out care for conditions such as sexually transmitted infections out of fear of discrimination. About 6% had been refused treatment based on their sexual orientation previously.
According to Johnson, researchers weren’t able to establish if the poor quality of HIV testing services are driving away patients, but they do consider it a reputational risk.
“I do think that word of mouth is powerful and would imagine that sites that have a reputation for clinical and counselling excellence see return and new clients,” Johnson says. “I think that, whether you are speaking about cancer or HIV or the common cold, health care that is respectful, affirming and supportive of the client will result in more people up taking the service.”
Missing patients, missing tests
With more than 4.5 million people on HIV treatment, South Africa’s programme is the world’s largest. But the first step to getting people onto antiretrovirals (ARVs) is testing – and the latest report isn’t the first to demonstrate serious gaps in this process.
Soon after he took office, former health minister Aaron Motsoaledi in 2010 embarked on an ambitious campaign to test 15 million South Africans in just 12 months. But by September, gaps had already begun to appear.
At a 2010 Rural Doctors Association of Southern Africa meeting, then vice-chairperson of the South African National Aids Council (Sanac) and former executive director of the public interest organisation Section27, Mark Heywood, presented worrying data – from pre-test counselling to the final result, South Africa was losing people at each step of the HIV testing process.
Speaking to doctors, he demonstrated that although two million people showed up for HIV testing between April and July 2010, only 1.7 million went through the process from start to finish, while 300 000 left after pre-test counselling. Of the 300 000 people who tested positive, only 50% were referred for follow-up care, including ARVs.
The Gauteng provincial chairperson of the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), Fikile Mtsweni, warns that as an activist she sees the effect of shoddy services daily. She is concerned that the government might be sacrificing quality as it scrambles to meet high HIV testing targets that are, at least in part, set by international donors.
“Standards of HIV testing services violate human rights”
“Standards of HIV testing services violate human rights because, currently, they are pushing for numbers in a way that force [facilities] to test everyone who comes for any consultation to get day-to-day… stats,” she says. “I understand that they want to put as many [people as possible] on treatment, but people need to be prepared.”
She continues: “The prevalence of HIV among young people, as a key population is high, but it’s [not] a solution [to] force to test them and forget about who they are dating. Education also is key to make them understand the issues that affect them.”
With regards to the queer community, she says the fear of being judged is keeping them out of the public health sector. People Mtsweni works with often travel long distances to seek special, LGBTIQ+ friendly services and treatment rather than face public clinics closer to home.
The non-profit organisation, Networking HIV & Aids Community of Southern Africa (Nacosa), is one of a number of bodies that train healthcare workers to provide HIV testing nationally. The organisation also provides quality assurance services to the HIV testing programme.
The head of communications and business at Nacosa, Sophie Hobbs, says the organisation is still studying the report but that it is working to strengthen its quality control mechanisms, including quality of services, such as employing “secret shoppers” to spot check facilities.
Hobbs says Nacosa is committed to following through with the recommendations of the report, which include producing and distributing a standardised HIV testing checklist to all facilities, standardising HIV testing training and strengthening the supervision of testers. The document also proposes that mobile testing services purchase simple cooler bags to help ensure testing kits are stored correctly.
Meanwhile, Sanac has welcomed the findings, as they “reflect transparency” and the need to improve HIV testing services, according to its communication officer Nelson Dlamini. “We will work closely with the national Department of Health to ensure that we mitigate on issues raised in the report,” he says.
Sanac says it disseminated the report to stakeholders and organisations doing HIV testing and even held a meeting about it on the sidelines of the recent June national Aids conference in Durban. But the national health department maintains it had not seen the report prior to receiving questions from Bhekisisa several weeks ago.
The department’s deputy director-general for HIV, Yogan Pillay, says the department is currently reviewing its HIV testing curriculum, which already includes guidance on how to treat vulnerable groups such as the LGBTIQ+ community with respect. The curriculum is also being revised to include, for instance, guidance on the HIV prevention pill and HIV self testing. He adds that the draft curriculum is available upon request.
Johnson warns that, as the country continues to explore new options to prevent HIV infections, the quality of HIV testing services needs to remain on the national agenda: “As we advocate and agitate for a range of prevention options, we must make getting tested for HIV a safe and even desirable part of the journey towards a world free of this disease that has fundamentally shifted the way in which we live, love and die.”
This story was produced by the Bhekisisa Centre for Health Journalism. Sign up for the newsletter.
A woman has been arrested for allegedly calling a traffic officer the k-word in Somerset West, Western Cape provincial traffic chief Kenny Africa said on Saturday.
“A lady addressed one of my officers with the k-word,” said Africa.
He said he could not give more details as the matter is sub-judice, but she will face a charge of crimen injuria.
This comes after repeated controversies over the use of the word.
In August Adam Catzavelos reached a settlement agreement with the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) relating to a video filmed on a Greek beach last year in which he used the word.
As part of the agreement, he has to pay R150 000 over a period of 30 months and will once again apologise for his comments.
He also faces a criminal case of crimen injuria.
That part of the complaint against him was postponed to November 12 in the Equality Court sitting in the Randburg Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday.
Estate agent Vicki Momberg was found guilty on four counts of crimen injuria after she called a black officer the k-word 48 times when he came to her aid following a smash-and-grab incident in 2016.
In March 2018, she was sentenced to two years in prison with an additional year suspended. She is appealing her conviction and sentence, and is out on bail.
Springbok rugby player Eben Etzebeth also faces an SAHRC matter relating to an accusation that he used a racial slur in Langebaan in August.
READ: ‘I was a fan’, says man who alleges assault, racial abuse by Etzebeth
In the meantime, officers in the Western Cape had a busy day on Saturday with 1467 vehicles stopped for checks.
Six people were arrested for driving drunk, with one person in Vredenburg being three times over the legal limit.
Two people were arrested for reckless and negligent driving in Mossel Bay and Grabouw respectively, and one for possession of dagga in Mossel Bay.
Four drunk and disorderly pedestrians were also arrested in Oudtshoorn.
Gauteng Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi has issued a warning to those who broke into a Soweto primary school and stole 90 tablets and, other expensive technology.
“We are going to Zola this afternoon together with the police. The community must tell us who stole our [equipment]. We must teach them a lesson they will never forget,” he tweeted.
The school was broken into on Friday morning, Sergeant Khalipha Mvula said on Saturday.
In addition to the 90 tablets stolen from the Esithibeni Primary School in Zola 1, three computers were taken from the principal’s office, as were some of the school’s “smart boards”.
Lesufi was horrified by the news and said he regarded it as an attack on education.
He was not immediately available to comment on the outcome of a planned visit to the school on Saturday.
“At the moment there are no arrests, but we are hoping they will make some arrests soon,” said Mvula.
A picture Lesufi tweeted, showed a hole made in a wall by removing the bricks.
The former SARS executive at the centre of the “rogue unit” saga, Johann van Loggerenberg, says he has recorded phone calls and emails that prove EFF leader Julius Malema had asked for help with his tax affairs through his attorney at the time.
Malema denied this.
News24 reported earlier Malema and Van Loggerenberg had met at the Sheraton Hotel in 2010, where the former SARS executive attempted to explain in great detail why the narrative in a so-called intelligence dossier, Project Snowman, that a rogue unit was operating at the tax service was false.
READ: Malema denies he asked SARS ‘rogue unit’ boss for help
It was during this meeting that Malema was recorded, saying he accepted SARS’ facts showing the narrative of the unit was false, according to Van Loggerenberg.
This was revealed in an affidavit by him, filed as part of an ongoing review application seeking to set aside a Public Protector report that contained the finding that the High-Risk Investigations Unit, later dubbed the “rogue unit”, had been established unlawfully.
Malema’s version
While Malema confirmed he had met with Van Loggerenberg in 2010, he gave his version of the meeting.
He said he had attended a meeting with former deputy commissioner Ivan Pillay and then-commissioner Oupa Magashula. During this meeting, Pillay allegedly took Malema to task for saying SARS was targeting Zuma loyalists.
“I said to them it’s wrong to target people based on their political affiliation. Pillay said to me that he had helped sort out Zuma’s tax affairs, so how could I say they were targeting Zuma people?”
It was after this that Van Loggerenberg met with him, Malema said.
READ MORE: EFF’s Julius Malema asked SARS ‘rogue unit’ boss for help
Van Loggerenberg allegedly presented Malema with his tax bill before matters surrounding the “rogue unit” were discussed.
Malema said he was surprised by this, adding he believed SARS was trying to intimidate and silence him.
“That’s how they survived,” he said. “But I told them to fuck off, that if there was issues with my tax they should send me a letter.”
Malema denied he never told Van Loggerenberg he had accepted SARS’ version about the unit. He also challenged him to release the illegal recording of the meeting.
Van Loggerenberg’s version
In a statement released on Friday evening, Van Loggerenberg acknowledged Malema’s comments, saying it would appear the EFF leader’s memory failed him at times.
“I have emails, recorded phone calls as recorded by myself, and self-made recordings of interactions between the attorney for Mr Julius Malema, namely Mr Tumi Mokwena, who made contact with me on March 3, 2015, on behalf of his client soon after I left SARS,” he said.
“It specifically concerned Mr Malema’s dispute with SARS at that time. I met with Mr Mokwena three times at his request. These culminated in a final meeting soon after, where Mr Mokwena was not prepared to enter into a signed service agreement with me, nor accept my normal business practice of providing invoices for services rendered.”
According to Van Loggerenberg, Mokwena had insisted he provided services without invoices and accepted payment in cash.
“I declined and that ended the interaction. I reported this to SARS and the SSA [State Security Agency] formally at the time. In 2017, Mr Mokwena again called me for tax advice regarding Mr Malema. I was unable to assist him. Mr Malema can obtain these details and records from Mr Mokwena if he so wishes.”
Van Loggerenberg also said Malema was confusing the timeline of events pertaining to when they met.
In a press statement released by SARS on August 23, 2013, the tax authority sought to set the record straight.
“The meeting at the Sheraton Hotel preceded the meeting with SARS that he is referring to.
“The conversation between Mr Malema and I was recorded lawfully by me since I met him alone at the request of SARS. This was required precisely to avoid any misconceptions that might have arisen later.”
The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) said on Friday it had received further allegations about Springbok lock Eben Etzebeth and his relatives but maintained a position that he was innocent until proven guilty.
This after it submitted a form to institute a hate speech case against him in the Equality Court, sitting in Hopefield on the West Coast, earlier on Friday.
The commission was acting in a representative capacity for the so-called Langebaan Four complainants who allege Etzebeth had used “a racial slur” against them.
They are looking for compensation of more than R1m and orders directing Etzebeth to apologise, to undergo anger management and racial sensitivity training as well as doing community service.
“I think this is a matter where there is a factual dispute and therefore this factual dispute will have to be determined by the court, what exactly that position is,” said Western Cape SAHRC commissioner Andre Gaum at a media briefing on Friday afternoon.
“I think it is a bit premature to speculate about possible sanctions. The Equality Court will have to determine what the facts are. I think the remarks that he got away with murder in the past are inappropriate, given the commission has not determined the facts.”
Gaum appeared to soften the tone taken by the commission’s legal head, Buang Jones, at a community meeting in Langebaan on Thursday night.
READ: ‘Langebaan Four’ seek compensation of over R1m from Etzebeth after alleged assault, racial abuse
Jones claimed this was not the first time Etzebeth had engaged in such conduct.
“He always got away with it. But this time around, it stops here,” he said to thunderous applause, News24 reported.
TimesLive also reported that Jones had reportedly said Etzebeth “was used to getting away with murder”.
On Friday, provincial commissioner Chris Nissen said it was not pushing for Etzebeth to return prematurely from the World Cup in Japan.
“We wish that he plays well and hope that he will bring back the cup to South Africa,” he added, indicating the Equality Court case and parallel police investigation would run as they should.
Etzebeth is expected to be given a chance to respond to the papers and the court will set down a date when he can be present.
Etzebeth has been accused of racially abusing a fellow patron at a pub in Langebaan in August. This, as the police are investigating a case of assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, crimen injuria and the pointing of a firearm also in August.
“No one has been arrested or charged and the individual implicated in the matter cannot be named at this stage,” said Lieutenant Colonel Andrè Traut.
ALSO READ: ‘I was a fan’, says man who alleges assault, racial abuse by Etzebeth
On Thursday, SAHRC members met with the police, spoke with the management of the local yacht club, looked at CCTV footage and briefed residents in the evening on the case.
Jones said at the briefing on Friday the police were looking at the possibility of charging Etzebeth with attempted murder.
He added the commission had received support from many South Africans of all races.
“There are people who are coming forward with more information pertaining to Mr Etzebeth. A white compatriot, an elderly pensioner, has brought to my attention that there are other allegations against the Etzebeths that have not been handled properly and he would like the commission to also intervene,” said Jones.
“There are a number of allegations that have been made, some which still need to be verified. We were told last night by the community that Mr Etzebeth and his friends, they call themselves the Wolf Pack gang, they have been terrorising communities on the West Coast and they would like the commission to intervene.”
Etzebeth responded to the allegations on his Facebook page.
He said: “It is completely untrue and unfounded to claim that I physically or racially abused anyone in Langebaan as has been reported on social media. Multiple witnesses can corroborate that.
“I am and will always strive to be a true ambassador to this beautiful rainbow nation and the sport that I love.”
Following a spate of public violence aimed at foreign nationals in parts of the country last month, President Cyril Ramaphosa and Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari have met to discuss relations between two the countries.
Speaking at the Union Buildings in Pretoria, where he is hosting Buhari on a state visit, Ramaphosa apologised to the Nigerian president for this violence. “We would like to assure you that South Africa is committed to the ideals of African unity and solidarity to respect the human rights of others…
“While we are working to address economic and social conditions that has given rise to frustration and anger among some of our people, we firmly condemn all forms of intolerance and will not hesitate to act against criminal acts and violence,” he said.
The visit marks the 20th anniversary of the Bi-National Commission through which formal relations have been conducted between the two African powerhouses since 1999.
Ramaphosa said the visit represented cordial relations between the countries and would strengthen these relations further.
“Our meeting today presents us with an opportunity not only to review the general state of our bi-lateral relations, but to make a firm determination [where] the ties between our two countries will be strengthened by your visit here.”
Ramaphosa emphasised his aim to create a closer, strategic relationship with Nigeria, as well as other African countries.
“It is this very strong bond that should compel our two nations to forge ahead in the creation of a much stronger prosperous and more peaceful Africa and restorations between South African and Nigeria,” Ramaphosa said.
He added that economic relations also needed to be strengthened, highlighting conducive conditions for trade between the two countries.
He further noted the visit would be used to strengthen the battle against violence, extremism and corruption in Africa, as well as coordinate efforts to evaluate the impact of climate change on both countries.
“It is my view that our deliberations today will afford us a significant opportunity to refocus and prioritise our cooperation to strategically address key issues for the mutual benefit of our two countries,” Ramaphosa said.
Buhari also condemned the violence against Nigerians in South Africa, calling for the implementation of measures to prevent violence in Africa.
Former DA leader and current policy fellow at the Institute of Race Relations (IRR), Helen Zille, has defended the right of one of the institution’s members to pen an opinion piece calling for Mmusi Maimane to resign as leader of the opposition.
The piece has caused a furore in the party after the IRR quoted the opinion piece in a tweet: “The seed of the DA’s recovery has been planted by a white man in the Western Cape. Alan Winde should be the new leader of the DA. Stand with the IRR…”
READ | A think tank shouldn’t try to ‘influence internal politics’ – Maimane on IRR’s endorsement of Winde
It then asked people to join the institution or SMS their name at a cost of R1 per SMS.
The piece, written by Hermann Pretorius, an analyst at the institute, stated: “The Honourable Mmusi Maimane should resign as leader of the Democratic Alliance.”
He suggested that Western Cape Premier Alan Winde shouldn’t be hesitant to take over, describing him as a “white, steady, reliable, white-haired male premier”.
Pretorius qualified the statement by saying that the DA should be the party to reject race-based politics.
It should also “reject the notion that the skin colour of politicians has any bearing on their ability to improve the lives of their constituents”.
Speaking to SAfm on Wednesday, Zille said the words were taken out of context.
“The bottom line of his (Pretorious’) argument was not that he (Winde) needs to be a leader because he is a white male, although, taken out context, that sentence could be made to read like that… but if you read it in context, what he is saying is the DA has to get away from race. That is the ANC and EFF’s paradigm.”
‘Freedom of speech’
“The point he (Pretorius) was making was that the DA cannot be a race-driven party,” Zille said in the interview.
“We (the DA) must stand for something completely different and leaders must be chosen based on capacity and merit.
“Mmusi [Maimane] is the leader of the DA, but that does not prevent people from discussing leadership in the party and I am not going to condemn Pretorius for exercising his freedom of speech,” she continued.
She added that there was nothing sinister about the timing of the column, saying that the institute encourages people in its employ to write about and comment on matters in the public domain.
Pretorius’ piece comes as Maimane continues to fight for his political future after a Rapport article linked him to a Toyota Fortuner which disgraced former Steinhoff boss Markus Jooste gifted to the party.
It also comes after the Sunday Times reported that Maimane had been quizzed by senior DA MP Mike Waters about who pays rent at his Cape Town home, going as far as requesting documentary proof.
‘Naked opportunism’
Maimane maintained that there was a smear campaign against him.
READ | Maimane to DA detractors: ‘We will not surrender’
DA chief whip John Steenhuisen said in a statement that the party rejected “with contempt” the “naked opportunism” displayed by the IRR with its “latest missive”.
Walters told Business Day that the party’s internal finance committee was reportedly looking into the rental agreement for Maimane’s Claremont home and reports that he drove around in a car Jooste gifted to the party.
Meanwhile, Winde told News24 on Wednesday that he would not consider running for the position.
– Compiled by Kamva Somdyala
Monthly Release of Selected Data
The public will have extra time to hand in written submissions on the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill after Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Health extended the closing date.
Committee chairperson Dr Sibongiseni Dhlomo said on Wednesday that the closing date changed from October 11 to November 29, after people asked for an extension.
“We have been considering the requests from relevant stakeholders who play an important role in the delivery of healthcare in the country.”
He said the new closing date did not affect the start of public hearings later this month. The hearings will start in Mpumalanga from October 25 to 28, before moving to the Northern Cape from November 1 to 4.
Quality universal healthcare
The committee previously indicated that the public engagement process would also take place over weekends to accommodate those who were unavailable during the week.
The NHI Bill seeks to achieve quality universal healthcare in South Africa and establish a National Health Insurance Fund.
The Bill also sets out the powers, function and governance structures of the fund and provides a framework for the purchase of healthcare services on behalf of users.
Written submissions must be sent to Ms Vuyokazi Majalamba and be addressed to the Portfolio Committee on Health, 3rd floor, 90 Plein Street, Cape Town 8000; e-mailed to vmajalamba@parliament.gov.za; or faxed to 086 694 3279 by the closing date.
Those who make a submission should also indicate whether they would like to do a verbal presentation.
Copies of the NHI Bill can be obtained from Majalamba or on Parliament’s website.