Health Ombudsman’s Report on Six KwaZulu‑Natal Health Worker Deaths
What the Investigation Looked At
The Health Ombudsman examined the deaths of six doctors and other health professionals who worked in provincial hospitals such as Prince Mshiyeni Memorial, Addington, Port Shepstone, Ngwelezane, Benedictine and Vryheid. The probe was triggered after the Health Minister and a parliamentary committee chair raised concerns about possible links to workplace bullying or poor working conditions.
Main Findings
- No direct link was found between the deaths and bullying, victimisation or the immediate work environment.
- The report did uncover widespread systemic problems in the public health sector, including:
- Staff shortages and frozen positions
- Excessive workloads for remaining employees
- Lack of medical equipment and supplies
- Aging hospital infrastructure and safety concerns
- Inadequate wellness and support services for health workers
Reactions from Medical Organizations
South African Medical Association (SAMA)
SAMA welcomed the report as a call for urgent reform. Dr Mvuyisi Mzukwa, SAMA Chairman, said:
“Although these doctors did not die because of their working conditions, thousands of healthcare professionals continue to work in intolerable conditions.”
He stressed that the findings confirm years of warnings about deteriorating conditions and urged authorities to turn the Ombudsman’s recommendations into concrete action with clear timelines and accountability.
Public Prosecution Service (KZN)
The prosecution service said the report brought clarity to a matter that had caused public worry. Spokesperson Dr Imran Keeka noted that while the deaths were not directly tied to bullying, the report should not be read as a clean bill of health for KZN’s public system. He urged the Health Ministry to treat the findings as a mandate to fix long‑standing issues.
Concerns Raised by the Public Servants Association (PSA)
The PSA expressed deep disappointment that the Ombudsman excluded workplace bullying as a factor. The union argued that:
- Toxic environments, intimidation, victimisation and excessive workloads can seriously harm mental health, even if they are hard to detect.
- The investigation overlooked the impact of chronic staffing shortages, limited resources and insufficient psychosocial support.
The PSA warned that downplaying bullying could discourage workers from reporting harassment. It called on the KZN Department of Health to:
- Strengthen anti‑bullying policies
- Improve confidential reporting channels
- Expand employee health services
- Hold managers accountable when abuse of authority occurs
Key Insight: Fear of Taking Sick Leave
One notable finding was that many doctors, especially trainees, felt pressured not to take sick leave because they feared it would extend their training or increase the load on colleagues. This highlights the need for better employee wellness programs that let health workers care for themselves without guilt.
Ombudsman’s Recommendations
The Health Ombudsman advised:
- Strengthening employee wellness and support services
- Improving oversight and accountability mechanisms
- Addressing safety concerns and infrastructure deficits
- Ensuring the Office of Health Standards Compliance monitors implementation
Conclusion
While the investigation did not prove that bullying directly caused the six tragic deaths, it shone a spotlight on serious, long‑standing flaws in KwaZulu‑Natal’s public health system. Medical groups, unions and officials agree that urgent action is needed—whether that hospitals, providing proper equipment, and real support for the mental and physical wellbeing of those who keep the province’s patients healthy. Turning the report’s recommendations into real change will be the true test of whether lessons are learned.


