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Phoenix's healthcare crisis: a community's plea for change

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June 04, 2025

STATE OF NEGLECT

- DR JONATHAN ANNIPEN

IN THE heart of Phoenix, Durban, a crisis is unfolding that demands immediate attention.

The Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Hospital and the Phoenix Community Health Care Centre, once pillars of hope for the people of this community, have descended into a state of neglect so severe that it now threatens the dignity, health and lives of those they are meant to serve.

For thousands of residents, many of them elderly, frail and economically vulnerable, these public healthcare facilities represent their only access to medical care.

And yet, what awaits them behind these hospital doors is not healing, but hardship.

It is no secret that the physical state of the Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Hospital and the Phoenix Community Health Care Centre is deplorable. Walls are peeling, sanitation is questionable, and essential medical equipment is either outdated or completely absent.

Many wards lack basic amenities, and waiting areas overflow with frustrated, tired patients forced to sit for hours — sometimes even an entire day — just to be seen by a healthcare provider.

These scenes are not isolated incidents, they are the everyday norm in Phoenix.

The tragedy lies in the fact that these facilities were built to uplift the community, not to compound its suffering.

The current state of disrepair reflects more than just budgetary constraints - it is a glaring indictment of mismanagement, neglect and a systemic failure to prioritise public health.

One of the most distressing realities facing patients is the chronic shortage of medical supplies and life-saving medications.

From insulin and hypertension drugs to basic antibiotics and sterile bandages, stockouts are frequent and prolonged.

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