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Written by Ndaba Dlamini   
Wednesday, 09 September 2009

Mayoral committee member for health Bengeza Mthombeni visits several inner city clinics to get 'first-hand knowledge' of the services being delivered by the City

City officials visited busy inner city clinics to gauge the response to National Child Health Week - and came away impressed.

IT'S about 12 noon and Yeoville Clinic is bursting at the seams with people, many of them mothers carrying infants, waiting patiently to be seen.

The bustle of a busy waiting room
The bustle of a busy waiting room

The waiting room is busy. A queue snakes from one consultation room, where a nurse is attending to scores of babies, to the other end of the waiting room. The sister in charge of the clinic, Granny Stobber, says the number of mothers bringing their children is higher than normal this week.

"We [have been] attending to an average of 77 children [a day] since the beginning of this week. Mainly they are here to get different services that we are offering during this week."

For Yeoville Clinic, and many other clinics in Johannesburg, the fortnight from 7 to 20 September is different from the norm. Many are taking part in National Child Health Week, a week-long campaign to encourage communities to work with the government in response to the high number of babies and young children who die every year in South Africa. Johannesburg has extended the national week.

According to the national Health Department, at least 75 000 children under the age of five die annually.

On Tuesday, 8 September, the mayoral committee member for health, Bengeza Mthombeni, visited Yeoville Clinic and several other clinics in the inner city to get "first-hand knowledge" of the services being delivered by City clinics.

Taking Mthombeni and other City officials through the clinic, Stobber said it serviced a big area that included Berea, a suburb as large as Yeoville.

"Because we are currently running a campaign to ensure the good health of children, we have set up a desk where parents can come in with their children to get services that we are offering during National Child Health Week."

Services
These include administering vitamin A to children aged between 12 and 59 months. Parents of children aged from six to 59 months are also encouraged to bring in their children for de-worming tablets and a free assessment of their nutritional state.

Looking after the health of the city's children
Looking after the health of the city's children

She did, however, bemoan the shortage of staff at the clinic because some were leaving for "greener pastures". "As we speak, one nurse is leaving at the end of this month because she has been offered better."

At the tiny Joubert Park Clinic, a desk has been set up outside, manned by a nurse - busy administering a tablet to a screaming child when the officials visit.

The sister in charge, Vicky Mathe, said its National Child Health Week Campaign was going along smoothly but like Yeoville Clinic, it was taking a lot of strain from the volume of people coming to get treatment.

"We are overwhelmed by the number of women who come for treatment at the clinic. We are located in an area where there is also a large number of immigrants from neighbouring countries, most of whom come for antenatal care just days before they give birth, and of course from destitute people from the inner city."

Outside the clinic, hundreds of people lounge in Joubert Park; some have made the park their home, while others are just taking a breather.

"We have been called a number of times to collect people who have either succumbed to hunger or other physical ailments in the park. We have even attended to stabbed people in the park," Mathe said.

She sometimes feared for the safety of the patients and her staff because of the unruly behaviour of people in the park, she added.

Mthombeni, who listened attentively through the tour of the two clinics, commended staff members for the sterling job they were doing. "What you must remember is that you are not doing this for the City of Johannesburg, but for the people who come here to get help," he said.

On the National Child Health Week Campaign, he said it was ongoing and urged parents to take full advantage and help reverse preventable deaths among children.

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