While the world commemorated this year’s International Day of Persons with Disabilities, the Gauteng Department of Health made significant progress of its own, issuing more than 42,000 assistive devices in the first two quarters of the fiscal year as part of its efforts to build a more inclusive and supportive health system. The department said it is intensifying efforts to ensure that inclusion is not just a slogan but a lived reality across the province. In the first two quarters of the 2025/26 financial year alone, ranging from wheelchairs, hearing aids, and walking aids to orthoses, podiatry devices, prostheses and Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) devices.
According to the department, this large-scale rollout reflects a continued commitment to empowering persons with disabilities through tools that restore mobility, independence, and dignity. โThis figure translates to a 78% issue rate out of the 48,000 assistive devices on the register, demonstrating the commitment to ensure that persons with disabilities receive the necessary support and resources to improve their quality of life.โ The Department also announced its partnership with nonprofit and nongovernmental organisations to expand specialised rehabilitation services for visually impaired individuals within their communities. โThrough this collaboration, orientation and mobility specialists that are currently not available within our internal workforce structure assist in providing essential training and support to empower blind and visually impaired persons to regain independence and reintegrate into society,โ it said.
Additionally, a total of 1,578 assistive devices were issued specifically to improve mobility and daily functioning for visually impaired persons. โThese include long canes (foldable and rigid), roller ball tips, money sticks, talking Braille watches, sunglasses, liquid level indicators, tablet dispensers, needle threaders, signature guides, and other tools,โ the department added.