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How can South Africa improve access to healthcare and social services for undocumented migrant workers?

Bridging the Healthcare Gap: Strategies to Improve Access for Undocumented Migrant Workers in South Africa


The Silent Crisis

In July 2025, a pregnant Zimbabwean woman was turned away from Hillbrow Clinic in Johannesburg by vigilante groups demanding South African IDs. Similar incidents occurred in Durban, Pretoria, and Tshwane. This illustrates a troubling convergence of medical xenophobia, policy contradictions, and vigilante enforcement threatening the human rights of 2.4–4.2 million international migrants in South Africa. HIV testing in affected areas dropped 8.5% between Q1 2024 and Q1 2025, highlighting broader public health implications.


Legal and Policy Contradictions

Constitutional Guarantees

Section 27(1) of South Africa’s Constitution guarantees healthcare access for all, regardless of nationality or legal status, while Section 27(3) mandates emergency care. The National Health Act (2003) aligns with these provisions, allowing free primary care to all, including undocumented migrants.

National Health Insurance (NHI) Challenges

The 2024 NHI Act restricts asylum seekers and undocumented migrants to emergency or notifiable disease treatment. Since HIV is not notifiable, migrants cannot access antiretroviral therapy (ART) under NHI—a serious public health oversight. Prolonged asylum processes worsen access gaps, leaving migrants vulnerable.


Medical Xenophobia in Practice

Medical xenophobia—discrimination against migrants in healthcare—manifests through:

  • Documentation demands despite legal protections

  • Queue discrimination delaying non-citizen care

  • Communication barriers and refusal of translators

  • Verbal abuse from staff

  • ART access restrictions, forcing reliance on NGOs

Gauteng is an epicenter, with reports of migrants being denied treatment or accused of “stealing medication.”


On-the-Ground Realities

Pretoria (Nellmapius)

  • Maria (34) delayed TB treatment due to verbal abuse, worsening her condition.

  • Tendai (28) experienced a four-hour emergency care delay due to documentation requirements.

  • Rudo (41) travels to Zimbabwe for ART due to NHI restrictions, spending 40% of her income per trip.

Johannesburg (Hillbrow)

  • Only 10% of international migrants self-reported living with HIV (vs. 20% of internal migrants).

  • Many undocumented migrants never visit health facilities, showing access barriers deter engagement.

Durban (Addington Hospital, Aug 2025)

  • Vigilante groups blocked migrants from entering, despite no legal authority to enforce immigration laws.

Musina: A Model of Inclusive Care

MSF programs (2007–2009) integrated migrants into public health facilities through training, simplified documentation, and language support, demonstrating that inclusive care is feasible without parallel systems.


Drivers of Medical Xenophobia

  • Resource constraints: staff shortages, long queues

  • Xenophobic political rhetoric: scapegoating migrants

  • Public misperceptions: overestimating migrant populations

  • Lack of migration-aware planning: health programs overlook mobile populations

  • Institutional inefficiencies: slow asylum permit processing creates “de facto” undocumented populations


Public Health Implications

  • HIV & TB: Exclusion undermines epidemic control and promotes drug-resistant TB.

  • Preventable diseases: Migrants excluded from vaccination programs risk outbreaks.

  • Maternal & child health: Discrimination increases risks of preventable complications.

  • Occupational health: Migrants in informal sectors lack insurance and access to care.

  • Economic contributions: Migrants pay fees, contribute taxes, and create jobs.


Intersectional Vulnerabilities

  • Women: Barriers to prenatal care, family planning, and post-violence services

  • Children: Lack of birth registration, interrupted vaccinations, exclusion from school health programs

  • Elderly: Chronic disease management hindered by mobility and discrimination

  • Nationality effects: Zimbabweans face particular targeting


Evidence-Based Solutions

Musina Model (MSF, 2007–2009)

  • Integrate migrants into public health infrastructure

  • Train staff on migration-sensitive care

  • Simplify documentation and language services

  • Outcomes: sustainable inclusive care maintained post-intervention

Johannesburg Migrant Health Forum

  • Coalition of CSOs, healthcare providers, and academics

  • Developed multilingual rights resources, discrimination reporting, and legal support

  • Improved advocacy and accountability

Community Health Worker Programs

  • Recruit migrant CHWs for home-based care, navigation support, and advocacy

  • Evidence: CHWs improve marginalized populations’ health outcomes

  • Gap: National CHW programs rarely target migrants


Policy Recommendations

Immediate (0–6 months)

  1. Emergency Health Directive: Reinforce universal healthcare access, prohibit ID verification in facilities, and penalize discrimination.

  2. SAPS Protocols: Protect healthcare facilities from vigilante interference.

  3. Legal Hotlines: Fund NGOs to provide rapid legal support for denied care.

Short-Term (6–12 months)

  1. Mandatory Training: CPD for healthcare workers on migration-sensitive care.

  2. NHI Amendments: Include asylum seekers and HIV treatment for all migrants.

  3. Documentation Reform: Reduce asylum permit processing times and issue interim healthcare access cards.

Medium-Term (1–3 years)

  1. Provincial Migrant Health Strategies: Integrate mobility mapping and inclusive service delivery into planning.

  2. CHW Program Expansion: Add 5,000 migrant-focused CHWs across high-migration provinces.

  3. Health Information Systems: Track utilization and outcomes for migrants to inform resource allocation.

  4. Public Awareness Campaigns: Correct misconceptions, highlight migrants’ contributions, and promote shared humanity.


Stakeholder Responsibilities

  • Health Departments: Issue directives, monitor discrimination, integrate migration into programs

  • Facility Managers: Display rights signage, appoint migrant health focal points, train staff

  • Healthcare Professionals: Uphold ethical codes, report discrimination, complete CPD

  • CSOs: Document discrimination, provide legal support, develop multilingual information

  • SAPS: Prevent blockades, enforce facility protection protocols

  • Academic Institutions: Research, evaluate interventions, disseminate findings

  • International Partners: Fund and support capacity building and policy alignment


Monitoring and Accountability

  • KPIs (18 months): 50% reduction in access denial, 80% facilities with multilingual signage, improved HIV/ART rates, TB treatment >85%, maternal and child health parity, asylum processing <60 days.

  • Evaluation: Annual independent assessments and community-based monitoring, including mystery patient studies and participatory research.


Conclusion

Undocumented migrant workers in South Africa face systemic exclusion from healthcare due to policy gaps, medical xenophobia, and institutional inefficiencies. Evidence from Musina, Johannesburg, and other interventions shows that inclusive, integrated, and community-supported approaches are feasible and cost-effective. Immediate directives, training, NHI amendments, CHW program expansion, and robust monitoring are critical to bridging the healthcare gap, protecting human rights, and safeguarding public health.

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