Scientific Program

Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants across the globe to attend International Conference on General Practice & Hospital Management Dubai, UAE.

Day :

Keynote Forum

Christo Heunis

University of the Free State | South Africa

Keynote: Hospital supply and management in South Africa: Policy directions and challenges
Conference Series General Practice 2016 International Conference Keynote Speaker Christo Heunis photo
Biography:

Christo Heunis is a senior researcher at the Centre for Health Systems Research & Development (CHSR&D), Faculty of the Humanities, University of the Free State (UFS). His career-long focus is on the health systems and social aspects of TB, HIV and TB-HIV, on the one hand, and hospitals and hospitalisation, on the other hand. His Ph.D. research assessed hospitalisation for TB in the Free State. He has since participated in 38 R&D projects, 14 as principal investigator/project leader/coordinator.

Abstract:

Apartheid’s consequences for the South African health system and health care included the creation of a highly inequitable and discriminatory system – based on race, class, geographic area – with differential access, quantity and quality of health services for the wealthy and deprived. The policy directions and reforms of the post-apartheid dispensation have centred on increasing access to health care for all citizens based on the principle that “[p]ublic services are not a privilege in a civilised and democratic society; they are a legitimate expectation”. Nontheless, stark provincial, rural-urban and private/public inequalities continue to characterise the distribution and numbers of hospitals and beds. All three inequality dimensions are exacerbated by exodus of HRH: from public to private and NGO hospitals, to richer/better resourced provinces and to other countries. In the case of medical practitioners, specialists and pharmacists the increase in numbers since 1994 have been substantially lower than the population increase, and in the case of nurses just matched it. However, the absolute numbers of health professionals and available funding are not the central problems of the South African health system, but rather the vast inefficiencies in management and a divided health care system, with ever-more obvious distinctions between the public and private sectors in terms of access and quality. If the current policy direction towards national health insurance is to be successful, more equitable sharing of resources between the public and private sectors, major initiatives in management skills development – especially in public hospitals – and public-private partnerships in the provision of hospital services are required.