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Mahikeng porter suspended in mortuary debacle

───   OLEBOGENG MOTSE 09:49 Sun, 08 Nov 2020

Mahikeng porter suspended in mortuary debacle  | News Article

The porter who is alleged to have placed the body of a 60-year-old woman into a dysfunctional fridge drawer at the Mahikeng Provincial Hospital mortuary, has been placed on precautionary suspension.


The badly decomposed body of Rose Mosikare from the North West caused an uproar this week as media reports emerged that her distraught family lodged a formal complaint with hospital management. This, after finding her body in a badly decomposed state when they came to collect it for burial on 27 October. The suspension of the implicated official comes on the back of outrage and pressure from the Democratic Alliance (DA), African National Congress (ANC), and the provincial health department itself, demanding that no stone be left unturned in holding those responsible for the incident accountable.

According to Health MEC, Madoda Sambatha, the deceased was admitted to the hospital on 6 September 2020 after falling ill. Following a CAT scan, she was transferred to Tshepong Hospital in Klerksdorp to have a tumour removed. The patient was transported back to Mafikeng Provincial Hospital following the operation, which is where she died on 25 October. It’s believed this is when the porter placed her body in the dysfunctional fridge drawer.

The family received counselling and a written apology from the department, before taking Mosikare’s body into their custody for burial. The DA has described the apology as a “feeble one” in their statement, emphasising that the “poor quality of care provided in provincial medical facilities is costing the department billions of rands each year in medical negligence claims”. It is unknown if the family intends on suing the hospital and the department.

The ANC in the province has described the incident as “an abhorrent act”, that is “an antithesis of our African culture and traditions. Like other nations, Africans always display immense respect for the departed. The families of the deceased too, expect to have the memory of their loved one respected”.

Sambatha, on the other end, says the suspension is only the beginning of what is to come, with regards to internal processes. The department has launched an investigation to probe the matter further.

This isn’t the first the Mafikeng Provincial Hospital has come under the spotlight for its shortcomings. In 2018, as the North West capital descended into chaos, the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) deployed at least 57 nurses and 7 doctors to assist with patients. The hospital had been noted for suffering from chronic staff shortages and a lack of resources. It seemed, however, that the tide had been turned in 2019.


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