Migrants in South Africa have access to healthcare: Why it’s kicking up a storm - SABC News - Breaking news, special reports, world, business, sport coverage of all South African current events. Africa's news leader.

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A political storm has erupted in South Africa after a video went viral showing the health MEC for the Limpopo province – which borders Zimbabwe – berating a Zimbabwean woman who was seeking healthcare.

Responses have been divided. Some have called for MEC Phophi Ramathuba to step down on the grounds that verbally abusing a patient was out of order. Others have supported her, saying she reflects the sentiments of South Africans living in the area. The Conversation Africa spoke to Kudakwashe Vanyoro, who has done research on the treatment of migrants in South Africa’s healthcare sector, to unpack the issue.

In this context, medical xenophobia is a term that scholars use to describe negative attitudes, perceptions and practices of healthcare providers towards non-national patients on the basis of their national origin. Providers include frontline staff like nurses, doctors, clerks and security personnel.

In most instances, language, documentation and referral systems are used as vehicles of this discrimination. Healthcare providers scapegoat non-nationals for being unable to speak the local language, lacking referral letters or being undocumented.It’s a very serious problem. But the experiences of non-nationals aren’t all the same.Take geographic context. Discrimination may be more widespread in metropolitan spaces like Johannesburg where there’s increased political scapegoating of migrants.

This points to the need to avoid generalisations. It’s important to break down where the pressure points are and how healthcare providers respond. My research shows that not all South African health providers are hostile to all African migrants.South Africa’s public healthcare system is overburdened. But this is not because of non-nationals. According to the most reliable statistics they constitute no more than 8% of the total population.

The blame on migrants is therefore misplaced as these are health system management and governance issues. This should not be a debate about individuals in a country which continues to feel the effects of health inequalities embedded by apartheid.A higher concentration of non-nationals is likely in areas of high mobility and transit like border towns and metropolitan cities.

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Anything about the Phalaphala in parliament today🤔🤔did the president answer🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️

This storm only exists in your newsroom. We have moved on the MEC is staying put.

MEC was spot on

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