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Bodies of 19 psych patient remain unclaimed as police struggle to find families

Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi. Picture Credit: Kgothatso Madisa
Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi. Picture Credit: Kgothatso Madisa

Police are encountering unexpected obstacles to their efforts to identify 19 bodies believed to be of psychiatric patients who died after being transferred from Life Esidiment centres to various NGOs in Gauteng.

Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi said on Tuesday that the bodies had come from NGOs but remained unidentified months later.

He was speaking at a press conference on how his department was implementing recommendations made by health ombudsman Malegapuru Makgoba following the death of 94 mentally ill patients.

Makgoba found that NGOs to which the patients were transferred were unlicenced and many were ill-equipped to care for the mentally ill.

'It's challenging‚' admits new Gauteng Health MEC‚ Gwen RamokgopaNewly appointed Gauteng Health MEC Gwen Ramokgopa has described her first few days in office as challenging after taking over from her predecessor who was harshly criticized for her handling of the deadly psychiatric patients fiasco.  

The 19 unidentified bodies are not included in the initial tally of 94 dead.

In one case of an unidentified body‚ fingerprints linked the body to a family but when police visited the family‚ they denied knowing the person.

The family would not be give the police DNA samples to help identify the body‚ Motsoaledi said.

Motsoaledi said he hoped families would have come forward by now given the huge media attention given to the Life Esidimeni saga.

But he admitted that “all over the world families abandon mentally ill patients“.

Patient deaths show South Africa’s care for the mentally ill is in disarrayA report in South Africa detailing the death of 94 people with mental health disorders who were moved from the Life Esidemeni Hospital and placed in inadequate facilities has sparked outrage and led to Qedani Mahlangu stepping down as the local government Minister of Health in Gauteng province. 

“At some stage a decision might have to be taken by the police to bury the bodies in line with the law‚” he said.

The Department of Health and medical experts are working to find the right institutions to house about 700 patients who remain at NGOs.

Motsoaledi said all NGOs will be shut down as recommended by health ombudsman Makgoba but the department would not rush to move patients out of NGOs‚ to avoid a repeat of chaos that lead to patient deaths.

Makgoba has given the health department 45 days to apply his recommendations.

Following assessment by health department staff‚ seven NGOs have already been closed.

The experts have also assessed other facilities to take the patients.

Life Healthcare said one of its Esidimeni facilities can take 75 patients in the next week and would need eight weeks to get ready to take more.

The team has also looked at an empty facility in Selby‚ Johannesburg that was once used for rehabilitation of surgical patients from Gauteng hospitals.

 

 

— TMG Digital

 

 

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