Title: WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
1WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
PRESENTATION TO THE NATIONAL PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE
ON HEALTH
14 APRIL 2003
2PROVINCIAL BACKGROUND
3Provincial Background
- Social sector constitutes 79,8 of the total
expenditure with real term increases of 3,5 to
2003/04, 2,59 to 2004/05 and 0,54 to 2005/06 if
weighted average is taken into account - Improved quality of services medical equipment
R125,930 million - Provincial equitable share inflation adjustments
- 5,6 2003/04
- 5,1 2004/05
- 4,4 2005/06
4Provincial Background
- Health conditional grants, specifically NTSG and
HPTDG comprise 61,25 of the total provincial
conditional grants - Reduction of health conditional grants nominal
R50 million but in real terms (adjusted for CPIX)
reduction is R180 million - Year on year change is
- NTSG 2002/03 to 2003/04 2.8
- HPTDG 2002/03 to 2003/04 -0.53
5Provincial Background
- Health Vote at R4,29 billion 10,85 against
estimated actual expenditure in 2002/03, lesser
increases, 4,96 and 4,03 in the outer years
respectively - Health constitutes 26,17 of the 2003/04 budget
- Personnel expenditure consumes 60,98 versus
63,3 of the 2002/03 estimates - Equipment allocations of R40 million 2003/04,
R42,04 million 2004/05 and R43,9 million 2005/06
6Provincial Background
- HIV/AIDS combined totals of conditional grants
and exclusive allocations from the equitable
share amount to R54,8 million (2003/04), R66,8
million (2004/05) and R69,4 million (2005/06)
respectively - Increased own revenue collection allows
additional R11,7 million for equipment in 2003/04
and beyond - Decentralized end-user IT equipment R38,5 million
(2003/04), R22,8 million (2004/05) and R17,6
million (2005/06)
7OWN REVENUE
8OWN REVENUE
9BUDGET 2003/2004PROGRAMME AND STANDARDITEMEXPOS
ITION
10WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHBUDGET
2003/2004PROGRAMME EXPOSITION
11WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHBUDGET
2003/2004STANDARD ITEM EXPOSITION
12WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHSTANDARD
ITEMS 2002/2003 VS. 2003/2004
13Filled establishment as at 31 March 02 and 31
March 03 respectively
14WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 1
ADMINISTRATION
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, pay progression, workstudy reports
and UWC claims - Equip R40 million iro
critical medical equipment. - Misc R51 500
million iro possible deferments.
15WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 2
DISTRICT HEALTH SERVICES
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, pay progression, critical posts,
incr conditional grants - Inv Inflation, medicine prices
- Prof Spec Laboratory tests, new security
contracts, L/A Backlogs - Transfer increase in AIDS and INP conditional
grants - General Eerste River Hospital opened
16WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 3
EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, paramedics salary adjustments
- Prof Spec L/A backlogs.
- Transfer Decrease due to provincialization
17WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 4
PROVINCIAL HOSPITAL SERVICES
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, pay progression
- Inv Inflation
- Transfer Suspension from Social Services, New
Kings - General Conradie Hospital, Nelspoort Hospital
18WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 5
CENTRAL HOSPITAL SERVICES
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, pay progression
- Inv Allocation according to available funds
- Equip Shift of IT budget
- Prof Spec Shift of IT budget, NHLS
- General Pers reduction to fund Inventories
19Budget 03/04 AAH versus Conditional grants
20WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 6
HEALTH SCIENCES AND TRAINING
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, reduction of paid nursing students
- Admin Bursaries to students at WCCN,
transport - Prof Spec Payment to Cape Technicon for EMS
Diploma courses. - Transfer Additional bursaries allocated
21WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHPROGRAMME 7
HEALTH CARE SUPPORT SERVICES
INCREASES/DECREASES CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO
- Pers ICS, pay progression
- Inv Inflation
- Prof Spec Earmarked day-to-day maintenance
allocation. - Transfer Capital augmentation (CMD)
22CAPITAL WORKS
23CAPITAL WORKS BY PUBLIC WORKS
Hospital Voted 2003/4
New construction R20,50 million
Rehabilitation/ Upgrading R36,32 million
Revitalisation Programme R81,93 million
24CAPITAL WORKS MAJOR CONSTRUCTION
Hospital Total project cost Voted 2003/4
Eerste River Casualty OPD R4,90 million R4,90 million
Valkenberg Admissions Ward R12,65 million R4,80 million
25CAPITAL WORKS REVITALISATION
Hospital Total project cost Voted 2003/4
Vredenburg R46,16 million R15,28 million
George (Ph 2C) R35,00 million R26,45 million
Worcester R127,90 million R40,20 million
26CAPITAL WORKS MAJOR REHABILITATION/UPGRADING
Hospital Total project cost Voted 2003/4
Mowbray Upgrading R6,00 million R6,00 million
Lentegeur Rehab. Centre R20,00 million R20,00 million
27WESTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHMTEF BUDGET
2003/2004 - 2005/2006
28(No Transcript)
29Provincial Background
- Healthcare 2010 plan approved by Provincial
Cabinet - Adjustment estimates for 2003/04 will reflect
appropriate shifting of financial resources
within the vote and consequently the outer years
of the MTEF period
30Strategic Approach to Healthcare 2010
- Vision
- Equal access to Quality care
- Mission
- Change the shape and increase the efficiency of
the health service platform to achieve improved
quality of care and health status - Implementation Plans
- Service Delivery
- Infrastructure
- Human resource
- Financial
31Strategic Approach Focus during the first three
years
- Locate and relocate services within existing
and upgraded facilities with the focus on key
facilities - Address equipment backlogs according to
priorities ensure maximum gain from equipment
acquired - Develop uniform protocols for patient treatment,
guidelines for smooth referral and upgrade
patient transport system - Train, retrain and retain health staff in health
facilities and workers at community level in
support of home-based care - Key promotion and prevention strategies to
improve health status - Improved revenue generation
32Infrastructure PlanGeneral issues
- Current capacity of existing facilities 15 000
beds - 9 600 beds needed for 2010
- Considerable scope for funding new capital
infrastructure from HRP, PIG, Asset Swaps and PPP - Active involvement of the Works Department will
be a key enabler
33Infrastructure PlanRural Regions
- Rural District Hospital utilization not optimal
- Except for Vredenburg, Robertson and Hermanus,
rural district hospitals will have fewer beds - George, Worcester and Paarl be upgraded as
regional referral hospitals - Excess beds could be made available to NGOs for
step down facilities
34Infrastructure PlanCape Metropole
- Recommend
- One Regional Hospital situated within the
current Tygerberg Hospital facility - At least eight district hospitals with specialist
outreach improving accessibility - Includes a new hospital on the Cape Flats
accessible to Mitchells Plain and Khayelithsa as
a district hospital but also incorporating level
2 beds to facilitate outreach from the centrally
located regional hospital
35Infrastructure PlanTertiary and Specialized
hospitals
- Tertiary hospitals retained to provide the
required 1285 beds with a new configuration - All tertiary hospital beds will have associated
level 2 beds to provide for the inevitable 20
overlap of inpatient care - Psychiatric hospitals rationalised with 1 300
beds - TB hospitals rationalised to provide 1 100 beds
increase of 300 from original estimate
36Tygerberg Hospital In the region of 1300 beds
Academic Hospital
Regional Hospital
37Red Cross HospitalSite Development Planaround
300 beds estimated cost R110 million
PEDESTRIANENTRANCE
MILNER ROAD
KLIPFONTEIN ROAD
VEHICLE ENTRANCE
38GROOTE SCHUUR HOSPITAL In the region of 900
beds PPPs for remaining beds Disposal of
unwanted associated properties
39 Human Resource PlanStrategic Approach
- Ensure that the workforce meets the challenges
of service delivery - Key focus areas
- Consultation with labour
- Recruit, train, retain and retrain staff
- Nurses, mid-level workers, home based carers
- Attract clinical staff to rural/underserviced
areas and facilities
40Human Resource PlanPersonnel Shifts
- Personnel Plan
- Determine demand/availability gap
- Develop response strategies
- Primary Health Care
- Increase of approximately 1 300 personnel
- Hospitals
- 5000 plus staff to be relocated or reskilled
- Reduction of less than 100 posts
- Annual attrition of approximately 1000 staff
allows for restructuring of the staff
establishment without retrenchment being envisaged
41Financial PlanOverview
- Progressive shift to cost effective service will
release up to R500 million per annum for further
investment in efficiency gains - Impact of migration on provincial health funding
must be discussed at national and
inter-provincial level - Increased attention needed for revenue generation
- Effective billing and collection
- Road Accident Fund
- Preferred provider network
42Financial PlanInfrastructure
- Incremental improvements matched to availability
of funds - Capital requirements of R1,23 billion will be
funded from HRP, PIG, asset swaps and PPP - Equipment backlog in 2001 was R333 million
- Current allocation is R126 million by 2005/6
- Additional R12 million per year allocated from
increased revenue
43WHAT DOES THE BUDGET BUY?
44Background
- The 2003/2004 health budget is a holding budget
preparatory to moving towards Healthcare 2010
45WHAT DOES THE 2003/2004 HEALTH BUDGET BUY?
- DISTRICT HEALTH SERVICES
- Nurse-driven primary health care services in 242
fixed and 130 mobile clinics to over 3 million
residents of the Western Cape (80 of patient
contacts seen by a nurse) - Medical doctor supported primary health care
services in 64 community health centers with
over 12 million patient contacts per year - Health services provided by provincially-aided
hospitals and municipalities through the transfer
R249 million to these institutions and local
government structures
46WHAT DOES THE 2003/2004 HEALTH BUDGET BUY?
- DISTRICT HEALTH SERVICES
- Home-based care and visits to old age homes
- Reduced prevalence of HIV/AIDS through various
programs including the PMTCT and VCT programs - Increased cure rate of Tuberculosis to 75
- All eligible children in primary schools fed for
170 days during 2003/2004 - 180 000 patients admitted to 36 district-level
hospitals in the province and with 450 000
outpatient visits
47WHAT DOES THE 2003/2004 HEALTH BUDGET BUY?
- EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES
- Emergency medical services provided by fully
equipped EMS vehicles and trained staff covering
14 million kilometers per annum - PROVINCIAL HOSPITAL SERVICES
- Specialist care provided in 9 regional general,
6 tuberculosis and 4 psychiatric hospitals which
will admit 166 000 patients - DENTAL TRAINING HOSPITALS
- Dental care provided to 220 000 patients and 130
oral health professionals trained per year
48WHAT DOES THE 2003/2004 HEALTH BUDGET BUY?
- CENTRAL HOSPITAL SERVICES
- Highly specialized care provided to 953 000
patient day equivalents -
- 118 000 patients admitted from the Western Cape
and 94 000 patients admitted from other provinces
for highly specialized health care in the Groote
Schuur, Tyberberg and Red Cross Childrens
Hospitals -
49WHAT DOES THE 2003/2004 HEALTH BUDGET BUY?
- OTHER PROGRAMS and ACTIVITIES
- Training of health professionals in the three
Faculties of Health Sciences in the province
supported through a conditional grant - 450 nurses trained per year
- 27 million pieces of laundry laundered per year
both within own laundries and outside - 3500 prosthetic devices supplied to people with
disabilities - R14 million worth of bursaries allocated
- Central Medical Depot (CMD) trading capital
augmented by R2 million
50Ikapa Elilhumayo Growing Cape
- The Department of Health will support the iKapa
Elihlumayo initiative through infrastructural
projects and Public Private Partnerships that
have the ability to unlock significant resources
and promote the development of people in the
Western Cape.
51CONCLUSION
- The Department of Health faces significant
challenges with the 2003/2004 budget - The Department will take the first steps towards
the vision of Healthcare 2010 through a series of
turnkey events during 2003 that will be
announced durng the Ministers budget speech - The Department is totally committed to financial
discipline and living within our means - The Department is committed to Equal access to
Quality Care in all State facilities throughout
the province.