Teen Suicide Prevention Week FEB 18 – 25

The beginning of the year is an especially hard time for many teens. With exam results, their future into adulthood looming and the myriad of stress that comes with being a teenager. SADAG understands this and in the teen suicide prevention week, they along with partners are offering many workshops and tools to help those that need.

 

 

Teen Suicide Week Tool Kit

To download the material please click this link to go to the NCDs Knowledgebase to find all the files.

ARTICLES

VIDEOS

SSB Tax Thus Far- 2017 Budget 22nd February

In Pravin Gordhan’s first budget speech of the 2017 year, there was more clarity made on the SSB Tax waiting in the wings for implementation. It supports the concept of classifying NCDs again as chronic diseases, linking it with disabilities and especially ensuring integration into the NHI district health services.

The SANCD Alliance and partners have made comments on the NHI and hope to be included in subsequent rounds of discussion.


Madam Speaker, the Government is moving towards the next phase of the implementation of National Health Insurance. We are committed to achieving universal health coverage, in line with the vision of the National Development Plan.

Eleven NHI pilots have yielded valuable insights, on which we are now able to build. These include:

  • The design of contracts with general practitioners,
  • More effective chronic medicine dispensing,
  • Strengthening district health services through clinical specialist teams, ward-based outreach teams and school health services, and
  • Supportive information systems.

 

In the next phase of NHI implementation, an NHI Fund will be established. Its initial focus will be:

  • To improve access to a common set of maternal health and ante-natal services and family planning services,
  • To expand the integrated school health programmes, including provision of spectacles and hearing aids, and
  • To improve services for people with disabilities, the elderly and mentally ill patients, including the provision of wheelchairs and other assistive devices.

The service package financed by the NHI Fund will be progressively expanded. In setting up the Fund, we will look at various funding options, including possible adjustments to the tax credit on medical scheme contributions. Further details will be provided in the Adjustments Budget in October this year, and in the course of the legislative process.

Taking into account the 160 submissions received from the public, the National Treasury and the Department of Health are working together to revise and finalise the NHI White Paper and 2017 Budget Speech 21 the longer-term financing arrangements. There will be consultations with stakeholders over the period ahead on reform of the medical scheme environment, including consolidation of public sector funds.

Over the next few months, I will be working with Minister Motsoaledi, Minister Nzimande and Minister Patel on planning the Limpopo Central Hospital and the new medical school of the University of Limpopo.

Government is committed to increasing investment towards health promotion targeting noncommunicable diseases alongside the implementation of the sugary drinks tax, such as diabetes screening and nutrition education.

 

CANSA – Newsletter February 2017

CYCLING FROM CARLETONVILLE TO CAPE TOWN FOR CANSA

 

 
   

 

The first quarter of 2017 will see 14 cyclists participating in the Carletonville to Cape Town cycle tour to raise funds and awareness for the Cancer Association of South Africa (CANSA) in the Association’s 85th anniversary year.

“It’s not just about cycling for these riders,” says Lucy Balona, CANSA’s Head of Marketing and Communication. “Almost without exception, each participant has been affected by cancer in some way. This is their way of making a difference for cancer survivors by not only raising funds, but also raising awareness of how to lower the cancer risk and to show support for cancer survivors.”

Balona, who will be taking part says that it’s this type of passion and participation that CANSA encouraged on World Cancer Day on Saturday, 4 February. “The theme of the three-year World Cancer Day campaign is ‘We Can, I Can’ and explores how everyone, individually or in teams, can help to reduce the impact of cancer on individuals, families and communities.”

Riding 1 500 km’s – Cape Town 25 February to 8 March 2017

Cancer survivors will be top of mind for the team of riders who are going to cycle close to   1 500km in 12 days. Organiser Navarre Kruger, who is based in Carletonville says that the team, who is funding itself, has raised almost R200 000 through sponsorships and donations.

“We still have a short while to go, and we’re confident that we’ll beat the targets set by the team”,  he says. This money will go to CANSA’s care and support services, including the CANSA Care Centre in Carletonville. (http://www.cansa.org.za/cansa-care-centres-contact-details/)

The tour, with its two back-up vehicles sponsored by Tempest Car Hire and South32 and support members, will leave Carletonville on 25 February and will arrive in Cape Town on8 March. After a few days of rest, they will then tackle the Cape Town Cycle Tour on 12 March. To see the list of riders and route, please visit:

(http://www.cansa.org.za/files/2017/01/Carletonville-to-CPT-CANSA-Cycle-Tour-2017-Journey-Plan.pdf)

The team has been getting fit for the event, with weekly team spinning classes, social rides over weekends and some members successfully completing to date, the Telkom 947 Cycle challenge, PPA Mangaung Cycle Tour, Amashova Durban Classic Race, BestMed Satellite Classic as well as the Springbok Plant Hire Wind Down Challenge.

Generous sponsors to date include South32, Life Occupational Health Services, KWS, Kuvula Trade, Actom, ABB, Ergomax, Amayez and QMuzik.

Balona and Kruger may be contacted for more information on the tour and how to support it on 076 620 6785 or email [email protected]. Donations can be made securely and easily online at https://www.givengain.com/ap/2017CANSACycleTour/

ENDS

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Contact Lucy Balona, Head: Marketing and Communication at CANSA at[email protected]; or on 011 616 7662 or 082 459 5230.

Visit www.cansa.org.za or contact CANSA toll-free 0800226622 or at [email protected]. Follow CANSA on Twitter: @CANSA (http://www.twitter.com/@CANSA), on Instagram (http://instagram.com/cancerassociationofsouthafrica) and join CANSA on Facebook:CANSAThe Cancer Association of South Africa

ABOUT CANSA

CANSA offers a unique integrated service to the public and to all people affected by cancer. As a leading role-player in cancer research (more than R12 million spent annually), the scientific findings and knowledge gained from our research are used to realign our health programmes, as well as strengthen our watchdog role to the greater benefit of the public. Our health programmes comprise health and education campaigns; CANSA Care Centres that offer a wide range of care and support services to those affected by cancer; stoma and other clinical support and organisational management; medical equipment hire, as well as a toll-free line to offer information and support. We also supply patient care and support in the form of 12 CANSA Care Homes in the main metropolitan areas for out-of-town cancer patients; a hospitium based in Polokwane; and CANSA-TLC lodging for parents and guardians of children undergoing cancer treatment.

Section 27 – Life Esidimeni and The Premier of Gauteng

Dear friends,

For those of you who didn’t hear or read it yesterday, below is an extract from the opening of the Gauteng Premier’s State of the Province address:


Please join me in acknowledging the presence of members of the Family Committee representing the bereaved families of the Life Esidimeni tragedy in which more than a hundred mental health patients lost their lives.

Madame Speaker, we have been working very closely with the Family Committee as we implement the remedial action outlined by the Health Ombud, Professor Malegapuru Makgoba, in his report released on 1 February 2017.

On Saturday 18th February, we held a Healing Ceremony at the Freedom Park, at the request of the bereaved and affected families. At the Healing Ceremony families made an impassioned plea that as we mourn the tragic death of the mental health patients and take decisive corrective action, politicians and political parties must be advised not to use this tragedy as a political football because this prolongs their pain and anguish.  I hereby appeal to this House to honour the wishes of the families.  This is my humble appeal.

As we implement the recommendations of the Health Ombud Report, every step we take will be guided by the wishes of the families and the advice of the panel of sixty experts appointed by the Minister of Health, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi.

The pace at which we move in implementing all the recommendations of the Health Ombud is determined strictly by the wishes of the families and the advice and opinions of experts. We are also collaborating with civil society in this process.

As the Premier of this province, I have publicly stated my deep regret and profuse apology for the tragic death of so many of our vulnerable citizens who were under the care of the Gauteng Department of Health.

I want to reiterate the commitment I made to the families on Saturday: I will spend the remainder of my term over the next two years, to ensure that there is restorative justice and healing for the families and take every executive action possible to restore confidence in our public health system.

I would like to state categorically that the decision to transfer Life Esidimeni mental health patients to NGOs was not made in consultation with the Provincial Executive Council.  The Executive Council and I would have never approved a plan to outsource mental health, a primary responsibility of the state to care for the vulnerable in society, to NGOs. What is even worse is the fact that such NGOs didn’t meet appropriate standards and legal prescripts.

The Provincial Department of Health had repeatedly reported that, as a result of the new hospitals and community health centres, they had enough beds in public health facilities that could accommodate public patients from private health facilities such as Selby Hospital and Life Esidimeni centres.

As the Provincial Executive Council, we do not interfere in the appointment or retention of service providers by various departments, in strict observance of the laws of our land.  We dare not be found on the wrong side of the law.

I have always emphasised to all MECs and HODs reviewing contracts with any service provider must never compromise service delivery, especially the most vulnerable groups which depend entirely on the state for the well-being. Cost considerations can never override the imperative of the quality of care.

It is common cause that the ill-fated transfer of patients to the NGOs compromised the wellbeing of mental health patients. At the very least, the Department should have placed all patients in public health facilities or retained the services of private facilities in case there was no sufficient space in the public sector. As the Head of Government, I am deeply aggrieved by the extent to which those responsible for this tragic and ill-fated transfer of patients to unlawfully operating NGOs, have tried to hide the facts from me, the Minister of Health and the Health Ombud.

Together with the Minister of Health and the newly-appointed health MEC, Dr Gwen Ramokgopa, we are taking swift action to implement all the recommendations of the Health Ombud, the most urgent which is to relocate the mental health patients to appropriate facilities. We will provide regular updates to the Legislature, the Health Ombud and the public on the progress.

We are also working very closely with the families to deal with all the issues in the Health Ombud Report. On Saturday, we hosted a Healing Ceremony for the affected families and this was a heart-rending moment for all of us. We will erect Memorial Stones at the Freedom Park in honour of all those who passed on.

Learning from this tragic death of mental health patients, I have decided to institute a wide-ranging inspection and condition assessment of all centres that care for the most vulnerable – the elderly, people with disabilities and children – whether they are operated by the public, private or NGO sectors.

It is our responsibility as the state to care for the weak. Every institution that provides services to the most vulnerable must meet appropriate standards. We cannot wait for another tragedy before we take wide-ranging action.  The Life Esidimeni tragedy must spur us into action over the next two years to restore the dignity and human rights of mental health patients and all vulnerable groups in our communities.  I am determined to lead this mission over the next two years of my term of office as the Premier of this province.  I will appoint the Premier’s Mental Health Advisory Panel to assist in this mission.


Clearly, this is a moment we should seize in the manner suggested by Crick and others. SECTION27 is ready to give any assistance we can to your endeavours and under your leadership as experts in this field of health care and human right

Mark Haywood