Medi-Clinic

First group of Indian nurses to arrive soon - 17 May 2007

Anso Thom: The Cape Times

A PRIVATE hospital group is recruiting nurses from India to work in its Western Cape intensive care unit wards where the shortage is most critical. The first group of nurses will arrive at Medi-Clinic hospitals next month. They are expected to stay for at least three years until there are enough South African nurses to fill the posts. Medi-Clinic nursing director Estelle Jordaan said the move has attracted a lot of criticism from the nursing community which felt the nurses may not be as competent, but she said they had decided on India because their nurses were well trained, they had more nurses in the country than they were able to employ, and their work ethic was unbelievable. Jordaan said the rationalisation of nursing training institutions in the Western Cape had had a big effect on the number of nurses available.

She said that the province went from four nursing colleges and three universities training nurses to one of each. Many highly trained and experienced nurses have left the country to work in the UK and the Middle East, where salaries are better. Three years ago, Medi-Clinic placed advertisements in the Middle East and the UK in the hope of attracting South Africans back to the country. Jordaan said that there was a lot of enthusiasm, but salaries then were not competitive. In December 2005, Jordaan visited the Philippines, India and Singapore. Even though nurses don't receive dedicated intensive-care nurse training in India, she said it was included as a module in their UK-based syllabus.

Medi-Clinic advertised 150 posts in India and received 3 500 applications. In all, 23 nurses wrote a Nursing Council Exam recently. Jordaan said the nurses would be paid the same as their SA colleagues, but they would receive accommodation allowances, as they were contract workers, and would not be paid a pension benefit. Another drawcard is the fact that one month's salary in South Africa is equivalent to a year's pay in India. Jordaan has returned to India and recruited an extra 120 nurses, who are expected to arrive within the next year.

Medi-Clinic boosts stake in Emirates Healthcare - 20 April 2007

Reuters via Business Report

HOSPITAL group Medi-Clinic had raised its stake in Dubai's Emirates Healthcare to 50 percent plus one share, boosting its presence in the Middle East. Medi-Clinic bought a 49 percent stake in the health group last April for $46.4 million (R326 million). It said its latest share purchase took the total investment to $53.1 million. The company said in a statement that the investment in Dubai was an ideal platform to enter healthcare markets in the rest of the Gulf coalition countries and the Middle East. Emirates Healthcare is a holding company of the Dubai-based Varkey Group, a private healthcare group.

Black people make up 47% of Hasa's board

Neesa Moodley: Business Report. 19 September 2006

THE Hospital Association of SA (Hasa), which represents more than 90 percent of private hospitals in the country, has appointed a new board, with 47 percent black representation. Norman Weltman of Netcare will be chairman for two years, replacing Ramesh Bhoola of Joint Medical Holdings, who will retain his seat. Nkaki Matlala of Medi-Clinic is the new vice-chairman. Acting Hasa chief executive Kurt Worrall-Clare said it was the first time a member of the association's nursing subcommittee had been elected to the board to ensure nurses were afforded a significant voice in the management of Hasa


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