Statement of Assets and Liabilities
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
KwaZulu-Natal Health MEC Nomagugu Simelane-Zulu has called for an urgent investigation into the death of a RK Khan Hospital patient who was found with maggots in his mouth.
Simelane-Zulu wanted the health department to establish the circumstances surrounding the patient’s death and take stringent disciplinary action should any individuals be found guilty of wrongdoing, the department said in a statement on Thursday.
The 52-year-old patient, identified as Sadick Ebrahim, died in the hospital on Tuesday after he had been admitted on June 19.
Ebrahim was suffering from ailments that may not be divulged due to the National Health Act.
The act prohibited the public discussion of confidential clinical information, including how a patient was managed within a healthcare facility, the department said.
“We are quite shocked by the state of the patient [when the video was taken] before his demise. We really don’t understand how things could have gotten to this level. We are going to conduct a thorough and proper investigation to understand what led to this,” Simelane-Zulu said.
ALSO READ: Family left fuming as maggots found in mouth of Durban hospital patient
The MEC further expressed concern at the manner in which the patient had died.
“While we understand that our hospitals are understaffed, and we have a lot of patients that we must look after, we do not believe that it makes sense that a patient would be in our care for so long and yet when he left this world, he leaves in this particular fashion.
“The reality of it is that it means, while he was under our care, and he had the challenges that he did, he also had the added discomfort of having to deal with the situation that he was faced with. I have asked the acting head of department that we should do a thorough investigation.”
Simelane-Zulu further urged healthcare professionals in hospitals across the province to take the responsibility they were entrusted with seriously, despite the challenges.
“While we understand that you are under pressure and have a lot of work, once a patient is with you, make sure you do a thorough assessment.
“You must treat that patient as you would treat your own family member because that’s the commitment that we made as professionals,” she concluded.
The Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) is at the forefront of fighting corruption in the country and therefore, without adequate funding, the fight against crime “will be seriously undermined”, its acting executive director, Victor Senna, told the portfolio committee on police.
Senna and his team appeared before the committee on Thursday to lay out their annual performance plan for the 2019/20 financial year.
Senna said IPID’s operations are stable, despite the departure of former executive director Robert McBride.
He added they would appreciate it if the position was filled soon to maintain stability.
DA MP Andrew Whitfield asked committee chairperson Tina Joemat-Pettersson to write to Police Minister Bheki Cele in this regard, as Senna’s role as acting executive director expires at the end of the month.
Joemat-Pettersson said she would do this.
Senna was appointed in March this year after the fifth Parliament’s portfolio committee on police’s controversial decision not to renew McBride’s contract.
IPID’s chief financial officer, Patrick Setshedi, told the committee on Thursday that its budget allocations had increased from R234.7m in the 2014/15 financial year to R336.7m for 2018/19 at a growth rate of 34%. The increase is the result of increased funding for the police.
Its expenditure is expected to grow from R336.7m in 2019/20 to R381.6m in 2021/22 at an average growth rate of 13%, mainly to accommodate operating costs and contractual obligations, without increasing the directorate’s capacity.
Of IPID’s total budget allocation for 2019/20 of R336.7m, R228.8m is spent on compensation for its employees, of which most are investigators.
Setshedi added that R55.5m was spent on contractual obligations, which left only R52.3m for IPID’s operations during the financial year.
Setshedi said it was experiencing “capacity constraints” in general, with the following functions “extremely affected”:
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From integrating Afrikaans schools to implementing a provincial online admission system – Lesufi’s department’s plans have drawn praise and criticism from all quarters.
He is seen as a mainstay in Gauteng’s education sector.
Lesufi’s stance on Afrikaans schools has raised the ire of his detractors, but his active leadership and position in the rolling out of digitised schools in Gauteng have been praised by many.
A Durban man whose father’s mouth was infested with maggots after he was admitted to RK Khan Hospital says he will not rest until the staff at the facility pay for neglecting him.
Azaad Ebrahim said he was livid with the hospital after his 52-year-old father Abdul, who suffered a stroke and had mobility issues, was found with maggots in his mouth shortly before his death.
A video of the creatures in his mouth emerged this week, showing the visibly unwell man’s upper lip infested with moving maggots.
Speaking to News24 shortly after his father’s funeral on Wednesday, a distraught Ebrahim said he would do all in his power to ensure others didn’t suffer like his father.
“I do not want others to go through what I have. I took such good care of my father, but the treatment we received at the hospital and the unprofessionalism of the staff is horrendous. That cannot go on.”
His father’s troubles emerged after he was admitted to hospital on June 19.
“My mother came home from work to find his leg turned completely black and had become like jelly. He had previously been to the hospital for sores, but we were told to it was not bad, and given antibiotics and sent home.”
During admission, Ebrahim said nurses were degrading his family because of the strong smell coming from his father.
“The doctor was excellent, but the nurses were so unprofessional, spraying perfume all over, but not engaging us.”
He said it was decided that his father would be operated on as soon as possible. However, days later, no surgery had taken place.
Maggots in the upper lip
On the morning of June 23, Ebrahim said he called the hospital and was told that they were cleaning his father.
“I thought they were brushing his teeth and bathing him. I arrived at 10:00 to visit. When I saw my dad, his upper lip looked a bit swollen.”
Ebrahim said when he inspected closer, he was shocked.
“Maggots were crawling and so active and moving. I lost my mind. I screamed. I couldn’t believe that no one attended to him. The first thing anyone does in the morning is brush their teeth. They couldn’t even do that? Not even a guard came into the room. They just isolated my dad in the room because of the smell.”
He said that after taking a moment to calm himself, he went back to his father to find that nothing had been done.
“When I returned, they still refused to assist. I asked the nurse for utensils and tissue paper and cleaned him myself.”
Ebrahim said nurses only began helping after a relative reported the matter to the Health Professions Council of South Africa on the same day.
He said he was appalled by the hospital.
“I am so traumatised by this whole thing. A hospital is supposed to take care of our health. They could not even brush his teeth. They get paid to brush someone’s teeth. You take an oath to care for patients, but this is how you treat him.”
Ebrahim said his father was possibly not cleaned for the duration of his June admission.
“For five days, they never cleaned my father. I took care of my father every second of my day. I never had a child, girlfriend or family. You couldn’t do a simple thing like brush his teeth. They couldn’t look after his mouth. You see maggots in dead people, not someone who is alive.”
Video should not have been distributed – health department
The Department of Health said it had passed its condolences on to the family. Spokesperson Ncumisa Mafunda said the department was “extremely concerned about the filming and distribution of footage depicting a patient”.
“Such an act, even if perpetrated by relatives of the patient, as it sometimes happens, constitutes a violation of the patient’s inherent right to privacy and dignity.”
Mafunda said that, although the department was prohibited from divulging clinical details of a patient and how they are managed, it confirmed that it had been treating him.
It claimed that Ebrahim had a history of neglect and suffered from a number of serious ailments.
“Health professionals who were attending to a particular patient were concerned, but not alarmed, by certain developments during treatment”.
Mafunda said necessary protocols had been put in place to “improve his condition”.
She further criticised the media for “attempting to simplify and discuss in the public space clinical patient matters which are confidential, complex and protected by law”.
“Difficulties arise when this happens, as the department is unable to either confirm nor repudiate any allegation, as this would be in contravention of the National Health Act.”
She added: “Clinical matters and related decisions by clinicians on the management of patients are highly complex and may be influenced by a variety of factors, which may not always be understood by laypersons, including – with all due respect – members of the media.”
Alternative investment can offer better returns at lower risk by introducing greater choice to a client’s portfolio than traditional asset classes.
Gavin Ralston, head of official institutions and thought leadership at Schroders |
“Investing in alternative asset classes is not easy – it will take a great deal of work to make appropriate solutions widely available – but it is definitely worth pursuing,” Gavin Ralston, head of official institutions and thought leadership at Schroders, told financial advisors at the annual i3 Summit, hosted jointly by Sanlam Investments and Glacier by Sanlam,
The last decade has been terrific for global equities with Japan, the worst performing part of the world, delivering 8.4% per annum since 2009. Over the same period equities in the US (13.5% per annum), Eurozone (9.5%), UK (8.8%) and emerging markets (9.9%) rewarded investors with substantial inflation-beating returns. This equity return bonanza is unlikely to be repeated over the next decade. “In every case, except perhaps for emerging markets, we expect annual returns from equity to be between 4% and 7% lower per annum,” said Ralston. A similar situation exhibits in the global market for government bonds. The prevailing government bonds in each of these regions to deliver poorer returns over the next 10 years than that achieved in the preceding decade.
There are many factors to consider when diversifying client portfolios away from traditional assets towards alternative assets, including regulation (South Africa’s retirement fund industry must comply with Regulation 28, which sets strict caps for exposure to certain asset classes), appetite for risk and achieving the appropriate blend of alternative assets. “There are different ways in which you can blend alternative assets and different benefits to be derived from them,” said Ralston, who considered the alternative investment landscape under three broad categories: equity (private equity, venture capital, infrastructure and real estate), debt and absolute return.
Local financial advisors and their clients are turning to private equity opportunities because this is often the only way to access certain industries or companies. Another compelling reason to consider the private equity route is the dearth of quality opportunities on our country’s stock exchange. “Since 1994 the number of domestic listed companies on the JSE has halved from 600 to 300 – which means there are fewer opportunities to invest in attractive growth industries than there used to be,” he said.
The private equity investment trend has accelerated due to the myriad start-ups – often tech disruptors – that cannot source capital from traditional equity markets. And we now see innovators such as ride-sharing firm, Uber, being brought to traditional markets much later than previously. The only way for asset managers and investors to benefit from these exponential growth opportunities is through rounds of venture capital and/or private equity funding. To illustrate, Ant Financial, an affiliate of the Chinese Alibaba Group, raised US$18bn in its private form, something that would have been inconceivable a decade ago.
Private equity “has the clearest positive return pattern of any of the alternative asset classes,” outperforming the US S&P 500 index by 2% to 3% over long periods of time. “Private equity investors know a lot more about what is going on inside a firm than they would when buying through a stock exchange. Investors can influence what management does and create management incentives that are geared towards long-term value maximisation,” Ralston siaid.
The executive teams at private equity firms are also “freed up” to focus on multi-year business plans rather than obsessing over the next quarterly performance numbers.
Asset managers need their wits about them in the riskier world of venture capital. Ralston explained that part of the risk was due to investments being made much earlier in a company’s life cycle. But there are many other reasons to proceed cautiously. “The return variation between the top quartile and bottom quartile venture capital fund is in the order of 15% per annum, so the choice of who is running your fund is of extreme importance,” he said. As many as six in 10 firms that source funding from the venture capital market fail, so investors must aggressively diversify these portfolios. “As soon as you have 10 or more companies in your portfolio you will benefit from a reduction in risk – and an overall risk profile that is not far off that of the listed stock market,” said Ralston.
How can financial advisors steer their clients into alternative investments? “Both advisors and asset managers have a responsibility to advise and educate clients on how these new asset classes work within the regulatory environment. The best minds in the asset management industry are developing new investment vehicles that address problems like complexity, investment size, liquidity, valuation and fees. To date, the preferred solution is through listed vehicles that offer exposure to underlying alternative investments,” he said.
It is “utter nonsense” that some ANC MPs are placed in key positions in Parliament to frustrate President Cyril Ramaphosa’s reform project, the newly elected chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Faith Muthambi, said on Tuesday.
“I think it is utter nonsense,” she said in response to a question at an impromptu media briefing shortly after her election to the position.
“Because all of us, we are leaders in our own right. We are all members of the ruling party,” she said.
“No reasonable person would then act against his own party mandate. We are here, we complement each other.”
She said the role of committee chairpersons was to maintain oversight over departments and government entities.
“So, I need to allay that fear, to say there is nothing like that. I will say that is utter rubbish, because all of us, we are here with the same mandate.”
She said they had a responsibility to ensure that government’s policy directives were implemented, echoing the sentiment of ANC secretary general Ace Magashule, who recently told News24 that his legacy would be the implementation of the ANC’s policy resolutions.
The 5th Parliament’s ad hoc committee, which conducted an inquiry into the SABC board, had a slew of findings against Muthambi, including that she was incompetent as minister of communications.
Parliament’s legal advisors found that she had tried to mislead the committee. The #GuptaLeaks also revealed that she allegedly sent classified Cabinet information to the Guptas. The Public Service Commission made adverse findings against her for actions while she was minister of public service and administration.
ALSO READ: Muthambi flouted public service regulations while minister of public service – report
Asked about questions of her character, Muthambi said she has been elected as a member of Parliament. “So that doesn’t worry me a great deal. I’ve gone through that test; there have been objections raised.
“Believe I’m a fit and proper person to serve on this committee.
“If I was not a fit and proper person, I would not be here.”
ICYMI:
Zondo Inquiry: How tensions over Mumbai-Joburg route pushed SAA into agreement
Former South African Airways (SAA) CEO, Sizakele Mzimela, told the state capture commission of inquiry on Wednesday of the tension caused by the proposal to terminate the Mumbai-Johannesburg route, specifically between SAA, former Public Enterprises Minister Malusi Gigaba and Gupta-linked company Jet Airways.
Back and forth meetings between the two companies eventually culminated into a code-sharing agreement where both parties benefited. The agreement, however, was not struck before SAA got an opinion from the Competitions Commission, she said.
Mzimela told the commission that after an initial meeting was held at the Department of Public Enterprises with Gigaba as well as Jet Airways CEO, Naresh Goyal, a second meeting was held at SAA.
The meeting, Mzimela said, was called abruptly by Gigaba and Mzimela made her way to Cape Town without knowledge of what was to be discussed. Once she got there, Gigaba told the gathering that he had a few issues to discuss but first wanted an update on the Mumbai-Johannesburg route.