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Spacious 3 Bedroom​ 2 Bathroom​ apartment with modern finishes situated in King Shaka Estate, midway between La Mercy and Westbrook. Open plan lounge and dining area. Fitted kitchen with granite countertops and porcelain tiles and double lock-up garage. Large balcony with scenic and panoramic sea views.
The main bedroom with ensuite has access to the balcony. 2 spacious bedrooms and 1 guest bathroom.Trellidoors on windows and doors ​and​ 24-hour security access gate including perimeter patrol security. Close proximity to King Shaka International Airport, shopping centers and schools with only a short drive to local beaches. Prepaid water and electricity.
We are pleased to offer an opportunity to join an exclusive Private Dental Partnership.
The vacancy is for a Secretary/Receptionist to join a five man partnership and team of support and administrative staff. A varied day can be anticipated with primary focus on patient care. Applicants with an excellent command of English and first class telephone skills should apply. The position demands accuracy, attention to detail, computer expertise and general initiative. A willing team spirit to contribute to the pleasant working environment is essential. Working Hours: 9.00 to 17.00. Monday to Friday
Send CV to: nel@agfgroup.co.za
…
Large established manufacturer requires a highly experienced Production Manager with an N6/NDipl (or higher) Mechanical or Electrical plus strong production/plant management experience and extensive exposure to FMCG or continuous production. Will manage staff, machine / plant maintenance and production, machine efficiencies, fault identification, technical improvements, budgets, spares, maintain ISO standards etc. Durban. Call Scott 0117041302
Springbok utility back Frans Steyn is excited to be back in Bloemfontein after a rugby journey that has taken him across the globe.
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It was announced on Sunday that Steyn would join the Cheetahs from 1 July, after opting not to extend his stay with French outfit Montpellier.
“I’m very, very excited about joining the Cheetahs. I must admit that I’m really looking forward to playing my rugby in Bloemfontein. I just want to express myself on the rugby field and make an actual contribution and difference,” Steyn said in an interview with Netwerk24.
The 32-year-old, his wife Linca, and their three daughters plan to settle permanently in Bloemfontein.
Steyn, who was schooled at Grey College, represented Free State at junior levels before starting his professional career at the Sharks.
He has also represented Racing 92 in France and the Toshiba Brave Lupus in Japan.
Steyn left Bloemfontein in 2005 but said he’s always had an affinity with the Cheetahs.
“It was never easy playing against the Cheetahs. They always had a good spirit – which I observed when playing against them, but that was long ago. Hopefully that is still the case.”
Cheetahs coach Hawies Fourie said he was excited at the prospect of having Steyn’s experience to call on.
“It’s important for me to have experienced players in vital positions. He’s a versatile player, but his best position is centre or flyhalf and that’s where I’d like to see him feature,” Fourie said.
A Rugby World Cup winner in 2007 and 2019, Steyn boasts 67 Test caps for the Springboks.
The PRO14 is currently suspended due to the Covid-19 pandemic and it’s becoming increasingly likely that the competition will be cancelled.
If rugby continues in South Africa later this year, it is likely that the Cheetahs will play in a domestic competition featuring fellow PRO14 side the Southern Kings, as well as South Africa’s four Super Rugby franchises – the Sharks, Stormers, Bulls and Lions.
A weekend newspaper report indicated that SA Rugby was hoping to have the country’s professional players back on the playing field by 5 June.
– Compiled by Sport24 staff
Three teenage girls are believed to have drowned when they went for a swim at Cebe beach in Centane in the Eastern Cape on Saturday.
READ | Lifeguard, 7, lauded for diving into action to save boy, 4, from drowning in pool
According to Eastern Cape police spokesperson Captain Jackson Manatha, the girls were last seen on Saturday at around 14:00.
They were believed to have drowned. East London police divers conducted a search but the girls were not found.
Police divers resumed their search on Sunday.
“Centane police are appealing to Cebe Village communities to contact them on 073 288 0340 if they see the bodies,” Manatha said.
The girls are two sisters aged 14 and 13, and their friend aged 14.
According to the Stats SA Mortality and Causes of Death report, drownings made up 4.1% (1 411 cases) of deaths due to external causes of accidental injury in 2016.
High blood pressure during pregnancy can put mother and baby at risk during normal circumstances. But with the new coronavirus spreading rapidly, many are wondering how this highly contagious threat may affect them.
The good news is, thus far, nothing researchers have learned about Covid-19 raises additional concerns for pregnant women – even if their blood pressure runs high, or if they have been diagnosed with problems such as gestational diabetes. The bad news is, because the virus is new and relatively unstudied, there’s still a great deal researchers don’t know.
“Researchers are still learning how Covid-19 affects pregnant women,” said Dr Lisa Hollier, chief medical officer for Texas Children’s Health Plan and a past president of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, known as ACOG. “It’s important for women who have medical complications to stay in very close touch with their OB-GYN and other health care professionals who are taking care of them during their pregnancy.”
ACOG guidelines for pregnant women are no different than for anyone else trying to avoid infection from the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, a respiratory illness with symptoms that can include cough, fever and, in more severe cases, difficulty breathing. However, because respiratory infections can be harmful to pregnant women and their unborn children, ACOG does consider pregnant women an at-risk population.
“They need to be doing all of the things that all other women are doing to be sure that they reduce their risk of getting Covid-19 – washing their hands often, using hand sanitiser, not touching their faces,” Hollier said. “For all pregnant women, we are recommending you stay in touch with your healthcare professional about the best ways to continue prenatal care. Some visits can be done online with video.”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautions that people who have underlying conditions such as heart disease, severe obesity or diabetes are at greater risk for severe illness from Covid-19. And researchers know that high blood pressure disorders during pregnancy are one of the leading causes of maternal death worldwide – suggesting further investigation is warranted. The University of California in San Francisco is currently registering pregnant and postpartum women diagnosed with or being evaluated for Covid-19 to study how the virus affects them. The study will include women with hypertension and pre-eclampsia, a dangerous condition characterised by high blood pressure and protein in the urine.
Thus far, neither the CDC nor ACOG has separate Covid-19 guidelines for pregnant women with conditions such as gestational hypertension, gestational diabetes, chronic hypertension or pre-eclampsia.
“What little we do know comes from a small number of reports that have come out of China,” said Dr Elizabeth Langen, clinical associate professor in the University of Michigan’s department of obstetrics and gynaecology.
“They were the first who had to take care of women who had coronavirus during pregnancy. Unlike the flu, which is really dangerous to pregnant women, this virus does not appear to be any more dangerous to pregnant women with similar risk factors. Most people will have more mild symptoms and recover.”
But with so little data, it’s hard to say anything definitive, warns Hollier. “It’s certainly possible that it affects them worse. We just don’t have all of the data we need to give anyone firm answers.”
What should a pregnant woman with hypertension, pre-eclampsia or other complications do if she thinks she has Covid-19?
“If you have both pregnancy and something that affects how your heart is functioning,” Langen said, “if you are symptomatic, we are going to want you to go in and be seen.”
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Image credit: iStock
South Africa will likely not be able to prevent the exponential spread of Covid-19, with the full sweep of the disease to probably hit the country later this year.
And although South Africa acted much earlier than other nations in identifying the virus and implementing measures to halt its spread, it has only bought the country time to prepare for what scientists are calling “almost inevitable”: a dramatic rise in infections.
This is according to Professor Salim Abdool Karim, the chairperson of Health Minister Zweli Mkhize’s Covid-19 advisory group, who addressed a media briefing alongside other scientists on Monday night. It was the first briefing with the country’s top scientists since the coronavirus was first reported in South Africa on 5 March.
Karim was joined by among others Professor Glenda Gray, the chairperson of the Medical Research Council, Professor Koleka Mlisana, a microbiologist from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, and Professor Brian Williams, an epidemiologist formerly with the World Health Organisation.
“What we have managed to do, is delay an exponential curve,” Karim said. “It is a difficult truth, but can we avoid the exponential spread? No… unless we have a mojo that other countries don’t have.”
He also explained:
News24 reported on Sunday that government projections, presented to the Parliamentary health portfolio committee showed this peak infection scenario had been pushed back to September.
“No one in the world has encountered this virus. We have no immunity, no vaccine, no treatment. We are all at risk.
“As soon as the opportunity arises for this virus to spread, it will go back to the exponential curve,” Karim said.
Importantly, lockdown and other initial measures had bought valuable time to prepare and attempt to contain hotspots.
Karim, a world-renowned figure in the field of HIV research and epidemiology, is the chairperson of a Ministerial Advisory Committee (MAC) made up of more than 20 professors, doctors and scientists who advise Mkhize and the National Command Council chaired by President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Karim was speaking at a media briefing on Monday night, scheduled to shed light on the technical aspects of government’s response.
Experts from the MAC and Mkhize explained what they expected in the coming weeks and months, and detailed measures taken so far and what had informed decision-making.
Karim and Mkhize steered clear of any projections on the numbers of people they expected to be infected at the peak of the virus, and how many people were expected to need hospitalisation or die from Covid-19.
Unique trajectory
Karim explained that while concern existed over whether testing was adequate in poorer communities and that many cases lay undetected in those areas, it was far more likely that early and decisive interventions had curbed the spread of Covid-19.
“We expected to see an exponential growth in our epidemic. But this didn’t happen,” he said.
Testing capacity had increased, and as such dispelled these concerns for the most part.
Professor Cheryl Cohen, the co-head of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases’ (NICD) Centre for Respiratory Diseases and Meningitis, explained that the country’s early cases were largely imported.
Imported cases refer to travelers who were infected abroad, who returned home and then passed the virus on to those they came into contact with.
Karim explained that these two groups – the travellers on the one side and the people they infected on the other side – were expected to pass the virus on to their communities.
“When it [Covid-19] enters a community, it spreads like wildfire,” Karim said.
“For some reason, those two groups did not lead to this. We still have community transmissions, but it’s at a low level.”
As the local epidemic curve flattened and plateaued to a lower average number of daily new cases, testing capacity for the 80% of the population who do not have medical aid had been ramped up.
He highlighted that testing numbers were still too low.
Stages of response
According to Karim, government’s response was informed by eight key strategic responses planned and executed from early on.
The first four stages had unfolded in weeks past, while the next four stages would be informed by the data over the next two weeks.
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