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9 months ago
Rundu Hospital struggles with ageing fleet and poor infrastructure
Rundu Hospital struggles with ageing fleet and poor infrastructure
NBC Online
Tue, 07/08/2025 - 17:12
#Healthcare #RunduHospital #Infrastructure #HealthCareSystem #PublicHealth
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11 months ago
Rundu hospital sends patients to pharmacies while medicine gathers dust in storeroom
Patients sent to buy own supplies
Patients at Rundu State Hospital are being told to buy medicine at private pharmacies, despite essential supplies sitting unused in the hospital storeroom.
They say they have to buy their own anaesthetics, malaria kits, and basics like bandages.
Following several patients complaining they are told the hospital has no medicine, The Namibian this week visited the facility’s storeroom – only to discover supplies being kept in boxes without being dispatched.
Among the items were malaria test kits.
Despite this, Rundu resident Jairus Johannes on Monday said he was told the hospital has no such kits.
“I brought my daughter to the hospital because she was not feeling well. She vomited and I suspected malaria,” he said.
Johannes said his child was attended to, but he was told there was no medicine available for her.
“I was advised to go and buy a malaria test kit at the pharmacy, since there were none at the hospital,” he said.
Johannes says he subsequently bought a kit and took it to the hospital.
Ministry of Health and Social Services spokesperson Walters Kamaya and Rundu State Hospital superintendent Theresia Shivera did not respond to questions on the situation this week.
EMERGENCIES ONLY
In addition, The Namibian last week reported that the hospital was only performing emergency operations due to a shortage of anaesthetics.
The ministry blamed this on poor coordination and monitoring between its different functional units in the region and the Central Medical Stores.
In a statement, it said this has resulted in orders not being delivered and distributed on time, despite sufficient stock being available countrywide.
However, executive director of health and social services Penda Ithindi on Monday said the ministry is not aware of the situation.
“I will find out on the ground to verify the level of stock and we will give the directive,” he said.
A patient who prefers to remain anonymous on Monday said he has had to buy dressing pads and a bandage himself.
“I came for my follow-up and to dress the wound. I was told dressing materials are out of stock. I decided to go buy gauze swabs and bandages myself,” he said.
He was told to return to the hospital for dressing on Tuesday, he said.
“I cannot wait for tomorrow, because the wound is open and it can be infected. That’s why I bought the dressing pads, which cost me N$31.70,” he said.
PHARMACISTS SPEAK OUT
A private pharmacist at Rundu, who spoke on condition of anonymity, this week said he has noticed an increase in state patients being referred to private pharmacies since April.
“We have been receiving 20 to 30 state patients per day since the beginning of April to buy medicine,” he said.
Another pharmacist said: “More state patients flock here on a daily basis, saying there’s no medicine and they are told to buy their own.
An elderly woman was referred this week to buy a rabies vaccine after her grandson was bitten by a dog. It was expensive.”
She said the woman could simply not afford it.
Kehemu resident Johannes Mpoko on Wednesday said his child fell from a tree and needed a specific ointment, which was not available at the hospital.
“I was referred to the Rundu State Hospital pharmacy, and was told there’s no medicine unless I buy it,” he said.
Meanwhile, the child was in pain, he said.
NO STATE CT SCAN
Sarafina Shifafure, a Tuhingireni resident, says she was forced to spend N$300 on medicine this week after her daughter complained of a headache, dizziness and vomiting.
“I had to go buy the medicine to stop my child from throwing up, because in the hospital there was nothing. They checked her blood and extracted fluid from her spine to check if there was any infection,” she says.
Shifafure says the fluid extraction was done five times for some reason.
This was later abandoned due to possible complications.
“I don’t have medical aid, so I asked them to refer the child to a Windhoek state hospital, but they did not do it,” she says.
Shifafure says her daughter was instead referred for a CT scan at a private facility in Windhoek, which will cost her N$28 000, since the machine at Rundu is out of order.
The post Rundu hospital sends patients to pharmacies while medicine gathers dust in storeroom appeared first on The Namibian.
#Namibia #RunduHospital #HealthcareIssues #PatientRights #MedicineShortage
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11 months ago
Health ministry investigates medicine shortage claims at Rundu hospital
The Ministry of Health and Social Services says it will launch an investigation into why patients at the Rundu State Hospital are being told to buy their own supplies at private pharmacies.
The ministry’s spokesperson, Walters Kamaya, in a press statement on Friday said internal investigations will follow The Namibian’s report that patients are being sent to buy medication even after it was established that there was stock available.
Patients said on the record that some of them have spent N$300 on medicine at private pharmacies. A visit by The Namibian earlier this week to the hospital’s storeroom confirmed that the stock was available while patients were being sent to private pharmacies.
“In the presence of verifiable evidence of stock availability, internal investigation will be undertaken to assess the veracity of these specific cases of patients being referred to private facilities,” Kamaya said.
Should such instances be confirmed by the ministry, Kamaya assured the nation that appropriate administrative measures will be taken.
The ministry reiterated, and confirmed that stock levels including malaria test kits and dressings, are available at the hospital.
“Medicines are stored appropriately and dispensed to patients, countering misconceptions that drugs are kept in storerooms and not used,” Kamaya said.
“The ministry reaffirms its dedication to transparency, accountability and improving healthcare delivery,” he concluded.
The post Health ministry investigates medicine shortage claims at Rundu hospital appeared first on The Namibian.
#HealthMinistry #MedicineShortage #RunduHospital #PatientCare #HealthcareInvestigation
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11 months ago
No medicine crisis at Rundu Hospital, says health ministry
Niël Terblanché
A complete stock-out has not occurred at Rundu Intermediate Hospital, according to the Ministry of Health and Social Services, which has dismissed reports of a medicine and supply crisis as inaccurate.
Responding to claims published in a national daily under the headline “Rundu Hospital Crisis: No medicine, no bandages, no malaria test kits,” the ministry’s executive director, Penda Ithindi, said the article contains “several factual inaccuracies” regarding current stock levels.
He acknowledged occasional challenges in the sustainable supply of certain items but said these do not amount to a crisis.
“The low levels reported earlier had already been addressed, and further deliveries are expected to be made to Rundu Hospital as per the supply orders made,” he said in a statement issued on Tuesday.
Ithindi listed available stock levels as of Tuesday, including ten days’ supply of elastic bandages, seven days of plaster and crepe bandages, and six weeks of bandage conformity. Malaria test kits were available for seven days, and Coartem, an antimalarial drug, had a two-week supply.
For anaesthetics, the hospital had two months’ supply of propofol, four months of ketamine, fentanyl, and alfentanyl, and two weeks of sevoflurane.
“Rundu Hospital has an adequate stock of malaria test kits, including goods in transit. There is no crisis of missing medicines or supplies at the hospital,” Ithindi stated.
Despite the ministry’s position, public concern remains. Reports last week revealed that Rundu has seen over 2,000 malaria cases and ten malaria-related deaths since January. Health workers have raised concerns about shortages of diagnostic kits and essential supplies.
According to media reports, nurses and doctors frequently instructed patients to purchase their own medication and bandages due to recurring shortages.
The doctors also described a sense of demoralisation caused by persistent stockouts. One physician was quoted as saying they felt “helpless and useless” when unable to provide adequate treatment.
The hospital’s superintendent clarified that the Central Medical Stores in Windhoek manage the supply chain centrally, giving the hospital little control over procurement.
Ithindi emphasised that stock levels are monitored and replenished regularly.
#RunduHospital #HealthMinistry #MedicineCrisis #HealthNews #SupplyChain
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11 months ago
Health Ministry refutes Rundu Hospital stock-out claims
Health Ministry refutes Rundu Hospital stock-out claims
NBC Online
Tue, 05/06/2025 - 19:33
#HealthMinistry #RunduHospital #StockOut #HealthcareNews #PublicHealth
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