This article begins from a simple proposition: health system crises are rarely accidental. They are typically the visible end point of decisions taken, postponed, or quietly normalised over many years. Using Botswana as a case study, the article examines workforce governance as a central but under-examined driver of system strain and considers what meaningful reform would require.
For instance, only months earlier, in August 2025, the President had formally declared a health emergency following parliamentary acknowledgement by the Minister of Health that millions of pula were owed to private health care facilities, alongside persistent medicine shortages and service disruptions. That declaration suggested political recognition of systemic distress. However, the subsequent framing of conditions encountered during the hospital visit as newly alarming raises a difficult but necessary question: if the crisis had already been named, why did it still require dramatic rediscovery?
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