Pretoria mother shares harrowing experience at Steve Biko Hospital
A Pretoria mother claims severe mistreatment at Steve Biko Hospital, including unsanitary conditions, neglect, and dismissive staff during her labor.
Yet another young Pretoria mother has come forward with alarming allegations of mistreatment at Steve Biko Hospital, describing unsanitary conditions, dismissive staff, and neglect during her labor, which left her physically and emotionally distressed.
Rekord previously reported how another Pretoria mother’s worst nightmare became a reality at Steve Biko Academic Hospital when she found her two-week-old baby covered in feces, only to be told by a nurse, “You can clean it yourself.”
In this case, Chantelize Coetzee said she encountered several issues that deeply affected her birthing experience earlier this year.
She says that upon arrival on August 31, she was assigned a bed with no blanket or pillow, and the nursing staff allegedly denied requests by her mother to bring a pillow.
“I had to use my jacket as a pillow.”
Her mother was not allowed to be with her.
She furthermore describes the bathroom in the maternity ward as unclean, with an overpowering odor of urine and limited toilet paper.
“I was told not to wear underwear, and when I got up to go to the toilet, some amniotic fluid spilled on the floor. A nurse saw this and asked rudely asked me: “Who do you think is going to clean that?”
According to Chantelize, her labor progressed over several hours without adequate pain management.
“The nurses repeatedly dismissed my concerns about the pain, suggesting I was “faking” due to crying.
“I was not allowed to see a doctor, and I observed staff removing heart rate monitor results before I could view them. The machine’s screen was also turned away from me so that I could not see anything. The sound was also turned off, so I could not hear my baby’s heartbeat.”
Chantelize said after spending hours in pain with nurses telling her she was faking it and that she was only dilated about 1cm, she decided to pray as she feared not only for the life of her unborn baby but also for her own life.
“A nurse came past me while I was praying beside my bed saying: Your God will not come now and help.”
Chantelize and her family made the crucial decision to leave the Steve Biko Hospital and went up the road to a private hospital where doctors immediately assisted her and she was found to be 8 cm dilated and in advanced labor, contradicting Steve Biko staff assessments of 1 cm dilation shortly before.
Steve Biko Academic Hospital spokesperson Lovey Mogapi said they are investigating the matter.
Chantelize recounted hearing a nurse threaten a laboring woman, saying they would “leave her baby inside to die” if she didn’t push—a chilling echo of Nicole Mans’ experience earlier this year.
Also read: Newborn with birth defect left in filth at Steve Biko Academic Hospital
Mans, whose baby required a C-section due to gastroschisis, was denied the procedure and forced into natural labor. Struggling to deliver because of her baby’s organs, she recalled a doctor threatening to “leave her baby to suffocate inside her” if she didn’t push fast enough.
These alarming accounts spotlight troubling patterns of treatment in the hospital’s maternity ward.
Also read: Pretoria man alleges trauma, dehydration, and abuse at Steve Biko Hospital after accident
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