PSYCHIATRIC PATIENT DEATHS SPARK SCANDAL
JOHANNESBURG The deaths of nearly 100 psychiatric patients last year in South Africa’s most developed province have prompted anger at government officials who transferred the patients to non-governmental groups allegedly operating with invalid licences.
While President Jacob Zuma on Thursday expressed condolences to the families of the dead, some opposition leaders said the president was ultimately responsible for the scandal. They called for the resignation of David Makhura, the premier of Gauteng province. The Democratic Alliance, South Africa’s main opposition party, planned a candlelight vigil late Thursday outside Makhura’s office in Johannesburg.
The province’s top health official has already quit.
Only one of the deaths was linked to a mental illness, while 93 other patients died because of dehydration, diarrhea and other conditions that could have been treated, according to a health watchdog report. It cites reports that some non-governmental institutions were overcrowded and lacked enough food and staff.
The health department in Gauteng had transferred nearly 1,400 patients from a licensed facility to cut costs.
The report said some state mental health workers had been concerned about the transfer of the patients, and became frustrated because they felt their leadership was not listening to them.