Kupelo said the decline in condom distribution in the Eastern Cape was due to a combination of lags in supply availability while condom suppliers were awaiting SABS certification and challenges in delivering condoms to distribution sites in the province.
“2022/23 was the end of the condom supply contract and the period to award a new contract effective from 1st April 2022. This transition experienced a delay in availing the condoms due to the SABS quality assurance process that could be finalised only around September 2022,” said Kupelo, adding that the province started to receive condoms from October of the same year.
“The second reason were related to suppliers who were not finding it easy to deliver to Eastern Cape areas due to the high cost of transportation to the identified 26 delivery distribution sites across the province. Suppliers are all based in Gauteng,” said Kupelo.
This matter, he said, was now resolved.
Kupelo added that condom supply in the province is now improving. He said that the province had reached 96.7% of its target to distribute 17-million condoms in quarter 3 of 2023/24 (quarter 3 of 2023/24 is September to November 2023).
The SABS response
Lungelo Ntobongwana, acting CEO of the SABS, told Spotlight that all condoms distributed nationally by the department of health are tested at the SABS condom laboratory in Groenkloof, Pretoria.
“The laboratory is an accredited and dedicated laboratory for the testing of condoms,” he said.
“Downtime or challenges to operations as a result of unplanned disruptions have been experienced on rare occasions and the SABS has incorporated contingency plans to ensure that the testing processes and deliverables would not be negatively impacted.
“The value chain, from the production of condoms to the distribution and usage of condoms, requires the intervention of various role players. When there is a shortage of condoms, it could be due to several reasons and chinks in the value chain. The SABS can categorically state that there are currently no challenges in its laboratory or deliverables regarding the testing of samples,” said Ntobongwana.
Did clinics run out of condoms in 2022/23?
The National department of health insisted in April 2023 that while Gauteng was facing low stocks of condoms, there were no serious condom shortages in the country.
Surveys conducted by community-lead clinic monitoring group Ritshidze also show that condoms remained available in most facilities — but not all — throughout the year, but also indicate a pattern of rationing by health care workers and clinics. In some cases, they say condoms are only available in public clinics on request, and key populations often face stigma and discrimination when seeking to access condoms and lubricant.
Surveys conducted by Ritshidze in 2022, found that only 55% of sex workers could get enough condoms at public facilities. Ritshidze recommends that “condoms and lubricants should be available at all facilities and can easily be placed in the toilets or other areas of the clinic where people could take them without the fear of being seen and judged by others, or being told to put some back”.
Dramatic decline in condom distribution in SA, new figures show
Condom distribution in South Africa has dropped dramatically over the last five years, according to a Spotlight analysis of data recently published in the Health System Trust’s District Health Barometer
Image: 123RF/diy13
The South African government distributed 45% fewer male condoms in 2022 than it did in 2018.
The total number of male condoms distributed dropped by more than 300-million from 728-million in the financial year from March 2018 to February 2019 to 403-million in 2022/2023. Female condom supply also declined over this period, but not as sharply.
The full extent of the actual decline in condom supply across the country over the past five years has not previously been reported. The DA, though, did raise the alarm bells about condom supply challenges in Gauteng in April 2023.
Provincial departments of health have pinpointed the time required for certification of condoms by the South African Bureau of Standards (SABS) after the start of a new condoms tender in 2022 as a key driver of the decline, yet Health System Trust’s District Health Barometer (DHB) data shows that condom distribution figures have in fact steadily declined over the past five years.
Similarly, while Covid-19-related supply chain interruptions were a contributing factor to supply shortages at the height of the pandemic, the decline in government-supplied condoms started before the pandemic and continued after Covid-19 supply chain disruptions were resolved (as shown in the below graph).
Image: Supplied
The large decline in condom distribution in South Africa is alarming in the context of the country’s ongoing fight against HIV. While other biomedical interventions are now available to protect against HIV (such as HIV prevention pills), condoms should remain a cornerstone of countries’ HIV prevention strategies according to the World Health Organisation.
Research conducted by the University of Witwatersrand’s Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office (HE2RO) has found that condoms are not only the most cost-effective intervention available to government to combat HIV, but that provision of condoms is in fact cost saving for the country’s health system.
Where did condom distribution fall the most in 2022?
According to the DHB data, all provinces except for the Free State saw a decline in condom distribution in 2022/2023 compared with 2018/19 levels (as shown in the below graph).
Image: Supplied
The Eastern Cape distributed 65% fewer condoms in 2022/23 than it did in 2018/19, Gauteng and the Northern Cape distributed about 60% fewer, Limpopo 52% fewer, and the Western Cape about 46% fewer. With a reduction of about 19% over the five years, the decrease was much less pronounced in KwaZulu-Natal than in South Africa’s other provinces with large populations.
What caused the decline in condom supply?
Condoms are tendered nationally by the National department of health for a three-year period. Condoms procured by the government must be tested and certified by the SABS before distribution.
Neither the national department of health nor the Gauteng department of health responded to questions from Spotlight about the reasons for the decline in condom distribution. However, Gauteng’s department of health has previously pinpointed SABS certification processes as the culprit for condom supply shortages in the province.
According to an April 2023 media statement by the Gauteng department of health, suppliers that received tenders to supply condoms to the public sector were unable to supply condoms to the province while awaiting SABS certification in 2022, resulting in low condom stock in the province.
Spokesperson for the Eastern Cape health department Sizwe Kupelo told Spotlight in response to questions for this article that in 2022/23 “for most of the year there were no condoms to distribute”.
Kupelo said the decline in condom distribution in the Eastern Cape was due to a combination of lags in supply availability while condom suppliers were awaiting SABS certification and challenges in delivering condoms to distribution sites in the province.
“2022/23 was the end of the condom supply contract and the period to award a new contract effective from 1st April 2022. This transition experienced a delay in availing the condoms due to the SABS quality assurance process that could be finalised only around September 2022,” said Kupelo, adding that the province started to receive condoms from October of the same year.
“The second reason were related to suppliers who were not finding it easy to deliver to Eastern Cape areas due to the high cost of transportation to the identified 26 delivery distribution sites across the province. Suppliers are all based in Gauteng,” said Kupelo.
This matter, he said, was now resolved.
Kupelo added that condom supply in the province is now improving. He said that the province had reached 96.7% of its target to distribute 17-million condoms in quarter 3 of 2023/24 (quarter 3 of 2023/24 is September to November 2023).
The SABS response
Lungelo Ntobongwana, acting CEO of the SABS, told Spotlight that all condoms distributed nationally by the department of health are tested at the SABS condom laboratory in Groenkloof, Pretoria.
“The laboratory is an accredited and dedicated laboratory for the testing of condoms,” he said.
“Downtime or challenges to operations as a result of unplanned disruptions have been experienced on rare occasions and the SABS has incorporated contingency plans to ensure that the testing processes and deliverables would not be negatively impacted.
“The value chain, from the production of condoms to the distribution and usage of condoms, requires the intervention of various role players. When there is a shortage of condoms, it could be due to several reasons and chinks in the value chain. The SABS can categorically state that there are currently no challenges in its laboratory or deliverables regarding the testing of samples,” said Ntobongwana.
Did clinics run out of condoms in 2022/23?
The National department of health insisted in April 2023 that while Gauteng was facing low stocks of condoms, there were no serious condom shortages in the country.
Surveys conducted by community-lead clinic monitoring group Ritshidze also show that condoms remained available in most facilities — but not all — throughout the year, but also indicate a pattern of rationing by health care workers and clinics. In some cases, they say condoms are only available in public clinics on request, and key populations often face stigma and discrimination when seeking to access condoms and lubricant.
Surveys conducted by Ritshidze in 2022, found that only 55% of sex workers could get enough condoms at public facilities. Ritshidze recommends that “condoms and lubricants should be available at all facilities and can easily be placed in the toilets or other areas of the clinic where people could take them without the fear of being seen and judged by others, or being told to put some back”.
Image: Rian Horn/Ritshidze
Anele Yawa, general secretary of the Treatment Action Campaign (a member of Ritshidze), told Spotlight that the organisation faced challenges in accessing adequate condoms for its community outreach efforts. He said when TAC undertakes community outreach efforts, its members request condoms from public health facilities for distribution in communities but are sometimes told that there are not enough condoms for this.
Yawa added that people seeking condoms from public clinics are often told they can only take a limited number of condoms because of stock availability and that in some clinics “the condom box is empty, there are no condoms”.
Has the decline in condom availability impacted condom usage?
There are some concerning indicators that condom usage in the country is declining, which may in part be related to the drastic decline in condom supply.
The Human Science Research Council (HSRC), which conducts regular surveys of HIV knowledge and sexual behaviour in South Africa, recently released early data from its 2022 survey. The survey showed that teenagers and young adults between 15 and 24 years old reported lower rates of condom use at last sex than in previous survey years. The data presented did not pinpoint a cause for the decline — apart from supply constraints, other factors like a decrease in people’s perceived risk of contracting and dying of HIV may also play a role.
The HSRC will release its full survey results in April 2024, which are expected to provide more insight into why condom use at last sex declined among 15- to 24-year-olds in 2022.
Another concerning indicator of declining condom usage is the reported rise in sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in Gauteng. Spotlight reported in February that the resurgence in reported cases of STIs in Gauteng in 2023 is a wake-up call that control and management strategies are not keeping pace with the growing disease burden in South Africa’s most populous province.
In response to the increase in STIs, Gauteng’s health MEC Nomantu Nkomo-Ralehoko recommended expanded, consistent condom use, noting a number of factors including non-use of condoms, inconsistent use of condoms, and the forgoing of condoms by people using Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) as contributors to the rise in STIs. PrEP refers to antiretrovirals taken to prevent HIV infection.
Dismissing the conclusion of a causal relationship between a higher number of people being initiated on PrEP and the higher recorded number of STIs, Prof Linda-Gail Bekker, director of the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation, told Spotlight there is no evidence to back up the claim that PrEP is leading to lower rates of condom usage.
She added that the increase in STI diagnoses may be attributed to increased rates of testing, which has increased in the PrEP era.
“The notion that sexually transmitted infections have suddenly increased in the era of PrEP does not have evidence to support this,” said Bekker, adding: “We have no strong evidence to suggest that people are having more condomless sex than before.”
“The value of condoms as a measure against sexually transmitted infections as well as unwanted pregnancy is not disputed and condoms remain the cornerstone of the HIV response. However, we know that for many people, and particularly young women and young men who have sex with men, the choice to use male condoms is not always a given and negotiating condom use may not be easy and can be dangerous.”
This article was first published by Spotlight.
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