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    <title>Global South World - Healthcare Access</title>
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    <description><![CDATA[News, opinion and analysis focused on the Global South and rising nations across the world. Delivered by journalists on the ground in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas. From politics and business to technology, science and social issues, Global South World is the first place to come for accurate and trusted information.]]></description>
    <item>
      <title>The hospital bed as a death sentence: Africa’s ‘no bed’ epidemic</title>
      <link>https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/the-hospital-bed-as-a-death-sentence-africas-no-bed-epidemic</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/the-hospital-bed-as-a-death-sentence-africas-no-bed-epidemic</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2026 10:40:04 Z</pubDate>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Within three minutes of a walk-in alert, Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) from the National Ambulance Service were at his side, finding him with profuse bleeding from a deep shoulder laceration. For the next two hours and 18 minutes, those technicians fruitlessly negotiated with three major hospitals in the capital. </p>
<p>The response was uniform: "No vacant bed available".  By 12:50 am GMT, Charles Amissah was dead —not for lack of medical expertise or a responding ambulance, but for lack of a piece of furniture.</p>
<p>His tragic death has reignited fury over Ghana’s "no bed syndrome," a systemic failure where emergency care is routinely denied based on physical space. </p>
<p>However, a look into healthcare systems across sub-Saharan Africa reveals that Amissah’s death is not an isolated incident; it is a symptom of a continental crisis where hospital beds have become a tool of lethal exclusion.</p>
<h2>The Ghana context</h2>
<p>In Ghana, the "no bed syndrome" is a chronic ailment. In 2024, the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH), the nation’s largest medical facility, had to  suspend referrals  to its Surgical Medical Emergency unit because it was housing 60 patients in a 36-bed unit. Photos on social media captured the dehumanising reality: patients receiving treatment in plastic chairs, wheelchairs, and on the bare floor.</p>
<p>The Ministry of Health, on February 18, announced that it had constituted a  three-member committee to probe Amissah’s death , examining decision-making processes and contributing factors. Yet, local experts argue the problem is structural. Beyond the physical shortage, the system suffers from abandoned facilities, a lack of medicines, and a severe brain drain as medical professionals flee for better opportunities abroad. </p>
<p>Despite a national health insurance scheme, the cost of emergency care remains prohibitively high for many, and the referral chain is often broken by a lack of coordinated communication between ambulances and receiving wards.</p>
<h2>The Nigerian mirror</h2>
<p>Nigeria faces a nearly identical "no bed" crisis, often overshadowed by the "Japa syndrome"—the mass exodus of healthcare workers. The  story of Ifelola Abiona  last year, a 42-year-old mother of two, mirrors that of Charles Amissah. </p>
<p>Despite doctors being physically present and ready to operate at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), she was left to "languish" and eventually die because no bed could be found. Her husband recounted a harrowing ordeal of being referred between facilities, paying nearly a million naira (about $745) for redundant tests, only to be told again: "No bed".</p>
<p>The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) blamed this on a dysfunctional referral system and a weak primary healthcare foundation.</p>
<p>Chairman of the NMA in Lagos, Dr Saheed Babajide, revealed that in Lagos, only 57 out of 300 primary health centres are comprehensive enough to have doctors, forcing patients to swarm tertiary hospitals for minor ailments. This over-subscription, according to reports, means that many hospitals consistently operate at over 90% occupancy.</p>
<p>Furthermore, the lack of space extends to the families. Informal caregivers—relatives who perform the roles of nurses due to staffing shortages—are  forced to sleep on staircases , wooden benches, or bare concrete. They report being bitten by mosquitoes, shivering in the rain, and eventually falling ill themselves, creating a secondary public health risk.</p>
<h2>The ICU crisis in South Africa</h2>
<p>In South Africa, the crisis shifts from general ward beds to the even more critical shortage of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) beds. Reports reveal that South Africa has a mere  five ICU beds per 100,000 people . In some provinces, the ratio drops to one bed per 100,000.</p>
<p>The consequences are visceral. In Gauteng, South Africa's economically dominant province, which houses its financial capital, Johannesburg, a 29-year-old man died after a one-hour wait for medical attention; his family attributed the delay to "corruption led by the political elite" and a lack of available ICU space. Another patient waited six weeks for an ICU bed for a bypass surgery; during that time, gangrene spread, resulting in a double amputation.</p>
<p>The shortage is not just about infrastructure but specialised human capital.  Only 25% of ICU nurses  in the country are actually trained in critical care. This deficit, combined with crumbling utilities and water/power shortages, means that even when a physical bed is available, there may be no one qualified to man it. </p>
<p>There have also been reports of financial mismanagement where security budgets outweigh clinical budgets, leaving hospitals under-equipped while funds are siphoned away.</p>
<h2>Liberia and Kenya: Crumbling walls and digital deadlocks</h2>
<p>In Liberia, the "no bed" crisis is exacerbated by the scars of civil war and the 2014 Ebola epidemic. At Phebe Hospital, the second-largest in the country,  reports  from 2024 indicated that a lone surgeon had been forced to carry out operations by the light of storm lanterns because of frequent electricity cuts. </p>
<p>The hospital, burdened by $300,000 in debt to vendors, often lacks basic drugs, forcing doctors to watch patients die while relatives run to local pharmacies to buy supplies. At the James Jenkins Dossen (JJ Dossen) Hospital in Harper, the coastal capital of Maryland County in southeastern Liberia, the influx of patients was so high that pregnant women and their newborn babies were  forced to sleep on the floor.</p>
<p>Kenya offers a more modern, albeit equally frustrating, version of the crisis. Recent transitions to the Social Health Authority (SHA) portal resulted in chaotic situations where hospitals with physical beds were shown as having "zero occupancy" in the digital system. Hospital owners  reported  being forced to turn away women in need of maternity services because the digital dashboard "locked," preventing admissions and reimbursements. </p>
<p>Officials claim this was a deliberate downgrade to protect patient safety in facilities lacking essential equipment, but providers allege it is a cost-containment strategy by a state grappling with billions in unpaid claims.</p>
<h2>A continental death trap</h2>
<p>The  collective data  across these nations paints a grim picture:</p>
<h3>Why the bed is just the symptom</h3>
<p>The "no bed syndrome" is rarely just about furniture. It is the end result of the "Three Delays" model, according to  researchers :</p>
<p>Many governments in Africa still view Emergency Medical Services (EMS) as a luxury rather than an essential component of Universal Health Coverage (UHC). </p>
<p>In Nigeria, for instance, only  9% of the population  is covered by a formal EMS system. Governments struggle to maintain ambulance fleets, and most response is left to expensive, private hospital-owned vehicles that can cost more than a month’s wages to hire.</p>
<h2>The path forward: Essential, not optional</h2>
<p>The African Critical Illness Outcomes Study , which investigated about 20,000 patients from 180 hospitals in 22 countries across the continent, suggests that thousands of lives could be saved through simple, low-cost interventions that can be provided in general wards, such as ensuring oxygen availability and training staff in basic life support.</p>
<p>Case studies  in Sierra Leone and Malawi show promise. Sierra Leone utilised ambulances from its Ebola response to create a national EMS system that now achieves national coverage with 80 ambulances and over 400 paramedics. Malawi is piloting a coordinated "118" emergency number and trauma registry along its deadliest road corridor.</p>
]]></description>
      <source url="https://www.globalsouthworld.com">Global South World</source>
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        <media:credit role="photographer">Sodiq Adelakun</media:credit>
        <media:credit role="provider">REUTERS</media:credit>
        <media:title>Patients in pain, empty work stations, as Nigerian nurses begin strike over poor support in Lagos Nigeria</media:title>
      </media:content>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Edward Sakyi]]></dc:creator>
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      <title>Water contamination crisis in Indore, India, leaves dozens dead and hundreds ill: Video</title>
      <link>https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/water-contamination-crisis-in-indore-india-leaves-dozens-dead-and-hundreds-ill-video</link>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 02 Jan 2026 19:10:34 Z</pubDate>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The crisis intensified on New Year’s Day when a six-month-old infant died, prompting emergency responses from local authorities and highlighting vulnerabilities in urban  water  infrastructure. Investigations suggest that broken pipelines running alongside sewage lines allowed untreated wastewater to mix directly into drinking water drawn from the River Narmada.</p>
<p>Footage from the affected Bhagirathpura area shows residents queuing with containers to collect safe water, while municipal staff deploy heavy machinery to clean sewers and distribute filtered supplies. Hospitals have seen a surge in cases of severe diarrhoea and dehydration, with some patients arriving in critical condition.  Health  workers and volunteers report that even residents who consumed boiled water fell ill, and many households were temporarily abandoned as the crisis escalated.</p>
<p>The incident highlights how infrastructure failures in densely populated cities can escalate into  public health  crises. </p>
]]></description>
      <source url="https://www.globalsouthworld.com">Global South World</source>
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        <media:title>Water contamination crisis in Indore, India, leaves dozens dead and hundreds ill</media:title>
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Lucía Aliaga]]></dc:creator>
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    <item>
      <title>This is why Namibia is giving every citizen a digital ID to access public, private services</title>
      <link>https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/this-is-why-namibia-is-giving-every-citizen-a-digital-id-to-access-public-private-services</link>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Jun 2025 13:41:01 Z</pubDate>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>According to officials, this is a major step towards the country's digital transformation. </p>
<p>The smart ID cards will feature embedded chips storing biometric data, including fingerprints and photographs, to offer a secure and unified way for individuals to verify their identity across multiple services.</p>
<p>The Ministry of Home Affairs, Immigration, Safety and Security says the rollout will help tackle identity fraud, reduce duplication in public records and simplify access to essential services such as healthcare, banking, education, voting and  employment . </p>
<p>Authorities also  say the initiative  is especially crucial for people living in remote communities, where people have to travel long hours to access government offices. </p>
<p>Mobile registration units will be dispatched to rural areas to ensure no one is excluded.</p>
<p>Speaking to local  media , Executive Director Etienne Maritz called the project more than just a card update. </p>
<p>He described it as a foundation for digital inclusion, ensuring that all Namibians have a trusted, secure and consistent way of identifying themselves in both public and private sector transactions. </p>
<p>He also emphasised that the e-ID forms part of a larger national strategy to modernise state systems and improve integration with other Southern African countries.</p>
<p>To prepare the public for the shift, a national awareness campaign has been launched, beginning in the Khomas region. </p>
<p>One of its key events, an “Un-Conference on Digital Legal Identity,” will take place in Windhoek on 26 June 2025. </p>
<p>The event, among other things, will be open and informal than traditional conferences, to give residents a chance to ask questions directly and receive clear answers.</p>
<p>Over 500 participants, including local leaders and senior officials, are expected to attend the gathering. </p>
]]></description>
      <source url="https://www.globalsouthworld.com">Global South World</source>
      <media:content url="https://gsw.codexcdn.net/assets/asZRvKzcMYu5qvZOB.jpg?width=1280&amp;height=720&amp;quality=75&amp;r=fill&amp;g=no" medium="image" type="image/jpeg">
        <media:credit role="photographer">Luc Gnago</media:credit>
        <media:credit role="provider">REUTERS</media:credit>
        <media:title>People look for their name on the electoral roll, ahead of the 2025 Gabonese presidential electionat a polling station in Lambarene</media:title>
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Wonder Hagan]]></dc:creator>
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