
Image: GCIS
By MFUNDO PILISO
The Eastern Cape on Sunday received a much needed shot in the arm when the Cuban medical brigade arrived in East London after spending more than two weeks in isolation in the North West province.
Totalling 20, they comprise 10 general practitioners, two epidemiologists, four biomedical engineers and four bio-statisticians, also known as information management specialists.
Welcoming the Cuban entourage during a short ceremony in East London, health MEC Sindiswa Gomba said the brigade would be drafted across the province once they had completed a week-long induction, starting on Monday.
Gomba said the induction would bring them up to speed with where the province is in the fight against the coronavirus.
“We’ve agreed with their co-ordinator that we’ll put them through an orientation week, and that at the end of the week we’ll have a list that’s speaks to the deployment of the brigade,” Gomba said.
The brigade would be drafted to Covid-19 hotspots around the province, including BCM and the Nelson Mandela Bay Metro.
“We have doctors who are dealing with Covid-19. So it’s critical that we bring them in one room, because these doctors come from Cuba, without any understanding of the Eastern Cape.
“So the week will be about that, but after that we should all be able to understand each other and the task in front us. Then we’ll be able to deal with the deployment of the doctors to epicentres that we have.”
According to statistics, by Saturday night the Eastern Cape had recorded 32 Covid-19 related fatalities, KwaZulu-Natal 45, the Western Cape 149, and Gauteng 25 deaths.
“We don’t want to leave out Chris Hani district because it has potential [for infections to rise] and those areas will feature prominently in the deployment of the doctors.”
“The deployment will range in terms of the need in those areas,” Gomba said.