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Life Esidimeni patient's family learnt of death eight month later

Social Worker, Daphney Ndhlovu, is questioned. Family members and concerned parties attend the hearing. Retired Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke is heading the arbitration hearings between the State and the families of victims in the Life Esidimeni tragedy. Arbitration hearings have kicked off‚ in which three weeks are set down to find justice for families of the psychiatric patients who lost their lives. / ALON SKUY/THE TIMES
Social Worker, Daphney Ndhlovu, is questioned. Family members and concerned parties attend the hearing. Retired Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke is heading the arbitration hearings between the State and the families of victims in the Life Esidimeni tragedy. Arbitration hearings have kicked off‚ in which three weeks are set down to find justice for families of the psychiatric patients who lost their lives. / ALON SKUY/THE TIMES

Eight months after Life Esidimeni patient‚ Joseph Gumede‚ died in NGO Anchor Care Centre‚ his family was finally told of his death.

Daphne Ndhlovu‚ a social worker from Cullinan Care Rehabilitation Centre‚ was sent to tell the family in February‚ but Gumede had died in July 2016.

Ndhlovu testified to this at the arbitration hearings that are being held over three weeks in Johannesburg‚ to provide answers to families as to why more 141 mentally ill patients died when moved from Life Esidimeni.

Gumede had been staying in Anchor NGO‚ a makeshift home set up on the state’s Cullinan Care Rehabilitation Centre’s premises in order to look after Life Esidimeni patients.

Ndhlovu didn’t know about Gumede’s death‚ as she didn’t work at Anchor NGO‚ but worked next door at the rehabilitation centre.

NGO where seven Life Esidimeni patients died remains open despite ombud ordering it to close

Ndhlovu told Gumede’s family‚ “Please don’t kill the messenger. I was sent to deliver the message.”

She told the arbitration hearing: “It was first time the family was hearing he had passed on. They were very upset.”

Gumede’s mother left the hearing sobbing when she heard the story.

The problems started when Cullinan Care Rehabilitation Centre received too many people from Life Esidimeni homes.

It was licenced to take 150 people‚ but there were 267 there last year‚ Ndlovu testified.

Butchery turned into mortuary for Esidimeni’s dead

Two NGOs were opened on the premises of Cullinan Care Rehabilitation Centre to look after extra patients. Some patients from the centre were discharged to make way for Esidimeni patients.

At least eight Cullinan Rehabilitation patients died in NGOs.

Ndlovu testified that the NGOs employed no professional staff or nurses or doctors.

One caregiver at an NGO read out a patient’s script‚ and was reading out common psychiatric medicines in a “surprised” way‚ as if she had never heard of them before‚ she said.

Patients died at Cullinan’s Care Rehabilitation Centre and the NGOs set up on its premises.

About 60% of patients didn’t have medical records or medication with them when they came from Life Esidimeni homes‚ said Ndlovu.

The judge presiding over the hearing‚ retired Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke‚ said: “I am trying to understand how a person is admitted into an institution‚ and within a month or two they die of dehydration.”

Ndlovu denied that patients at Cullinan Care and Rehabilitation Centre were without food or water.

She said the centre was forced to take more patients than they had space for by staff at the Gauteng department of health.

When the Cullinan Care and Rehabilitation Centre CEO objected to NGOs being set up on the premises of the centre‚ she was suspended.

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