Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane has appointed Thandokazi Capa as the province’s new MEC for Health. Luvuyo Mehlwana asked Capa about her vision for healthcare in the province and rounds up some early responses to her appointment from healthcare unions and political parties.
Newly-appointed Eastern Cape MEC for health Thandokazi Capa has vowed to improve healthcare conditions in the province.
“I have the responsibility to turn things around,” she told Spotlight after being sworn in on 21 June in Bisho. “I’m ready to face the challenges of the department because I’m also from the province, so I fully understand the issues faced by the department. I will try my level best to make it a point that we turn around the situation in the department.”
Capa took over from Nomakhosazana Meth, who is now an MP in the National Assembly.
Vision for the EC health department
In recent years, the Eastern Cape department of health has often been in the headlines for the wrong reasons – ranging from a controversial scooter ambulance tender and severe difficulties during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, to labour disputes, budget shortfalls, and high levels of medico-legal claims.
Despite these challenges, Capa appeared to be brimming with confidence during a short interview with Spotlight.
“The department of health is a service delivery department, so it is important for our people to get healthcare service because as the department, we have that responsibility,” she said.
She said her priority is to understand the challenges facing the department as it is the first step to finding the best solutions. “I will meet all the stakeholders involved in the health sector to ensure that I understand challenges facing the department, such as medico-legal claims and issues of budget constraints,” she said. “With the assistance of the Office of The Premier and Treasury, we will be able to tackle whatever challenges are facing the department as a team.”
Capa was a councillor in 2011 in Ingquza Hill Local Municipality and in 2016, she was elected Speaker of the council. Towards the end of 2021, she served as the mayor. After the local government election in 2022, she was appointed as the OR Tambo District Municipality Speaker and she is currently the chairperson of the ANC Women’s League in the province.
She was born in Flagstaff in the OR Tambo District where she grew up in a family of healthcare workers. Her mother Zoleka Capa, who served in the sixth administration as deputy minister of agriculture, rural development and land reform, is qualified as a nurse and midwife.
Backing from premier
Mabuyane, who became the province’s premier in 2019, told Spotlight he will use this term to ensure that problems in the health department are tackled. This is one department, he said, where all its chronic problems must be addressed.
Regarding the systemic challenge of medico-legal claims against the health department, he said his office is putting every system in place from Treasury to “projectise” the Department of Health to deal with it. Our understanding is that this means, among others, that the health department is responsible for clinical and administrative interventions, while the Office of the Premier is responsible for the medico-legal defence, and the Provincial Treasury Investigates suspected fraudulent claims as well as providing the funding for medico-legal settlements.
“We will go hand [in] glove to ensure that problems of health in this term are address. I know some are national, such as medico-legal claims and all that, but we have to find a solution. We are not going to sleep, we have to find a panacea to those chronic challenges in that department. She [Capa] has all our support because from the 6th administration, we have already set up systems to make sure that Treasury as well as the office of the premier are able to assist,” he said.
“I still believe in the hub and bespoke service delivery model that we introduced during Covid-19. It really simplified how we work during COVID-19, it indicated all these bureaucratic systems that are sometimes collapsing can be put aside and we deliver,” Mabuyane added.
Capa is the Eastern Cape’s 11th provincial health MEC in the past 30 years. Among the ten previous MECs, only two have completed their terms of five years or more – Dr Trudy Thomas from 1994 to 1999 and Dr Bevan Goqwana who served from 1999 to 2006. During the period between 2010 and 2018, both Sicelo Gqobana and his predecessor Dr Phumza Dyantyi served four years each.
Nomakhosazana Meth had a three-year tenure as MEC after being appointed in 2021. As MEC between 2019 and 2021, Sindiswa Gomba served for a short period, as did Nomsa Jajula from 2006 to 2008. Helen Sauls-August, Pemmy Majodina, and Phumulo Masualle all served only one year in the position.
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Mixed responses
Sivuyile Mange, Eastern Cape chairperson of the Democratic Nursing organisation of South Africa, welcomed Capa’s appointment.
“We believe that the experience she has in the local and district sphere of governance and her activism in women issues makes her a capable person to lead the department,” he told Spotlight.
Former head of department Rolene Wagner was controversially moved out of the position last year.
Commenting on Capa’s appointment, Vicky Knoetze, a DA member of the Eastern Cape legislature, said: “Capa will have her work cut out for her as she tackles the systemic problems in her department, and the DA will closely monitor her performance to ensure good governance and accountability.”
She stressed that managing the health department is “a huge portfolio for a new, as yet untested member of the legislature”.
This sentiment was shared by Eastern Cape chairperson of the Economic Freedom Fighters Zilindile Vena who said it will be difficult for someone with no background in health to transform the department.
“The appointment of the new MEC is very complex because the new MEC was a Speaker of OR Tambo District Municipality, she was not an executive and now she is being drawn into a totally collapsed department,” he said.
“In the history of the department, we had doctors who were trying to change the situation of the department. Now, it has been proven that everyone without a medical background is easily misled by officials,” said Vena. “That is why there was a scooter ambulance controversy; politicians make decisions based on misleading information by officials because they don’t have a clue about how the department functions.”
This article was first published by Spotlight.
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