Tucked away in a secure, private, corner in the heart of sought after Claremont Upper, we find a special home with loads to offer.
As secure complex of just four homes, this is a carefully hidden secret offering a safe and convenient lifestyle.
This generously proportioned home has a peaceful charm that echos through the spacious open plan living room, dining area and kitchen (with separate scullery), all centered around and opening onto a beautiful undercover patio, with retractable top and side awnings.
Downstairs is completed with a study/bedroom, with ample fitted cabinetry as well as a bright sunny, en-suite bedroom, guest cloak room and storage room.
Upstairs is home to an extensive ensuite main bedroom, gracious bathroom, separate walk in cupboard and magnificent upstairs patio, complimented by superb mountain views.
The double garage incorporates a laundry and the low maintenance garden, with large trees and small jacuzzi complete this home.
Minutes away from Claremont School, Cavendish Shopping Centre, WPPS, the Grove School and The Herschel – this beautiful home is ideal for small families, those scaling down and the buyer looking for the ultimate lock up and go.
Beautiful modern apartment a few minutes away from Sibaya Casino, M4, Umhlanga Village and Gateway. Open plan kitchen fitted with caesarstone kitchen leading onto the lounge / dining area and patio. There complex offers a pool and braai area with beautiful sea views and 24 hour security.
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Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize says the demand for health services in South Africa is increasing and funds to address the change are limited mainly due to the continuous rise of immigration and the increasing burden of disease.
Mkhize made the remarks in response to a parliamentary question from Freedom Front Plus MP Phillipus van Staden who asked him what the reasons were for the shortage of doctors and nurses in South African state hospitals.
In his response, Mkhize said: “The primary reasons why the Republic [of South Africa] has a shortage of doctors and nurses is the fact that the public health sector budget has not been increasing in real terms for the past 10 years, impacting on the number of staff that can be appointed.
“Furthermore, the demand for health services in the country is increasing while there is no additional funding to address the change, which results primarily from immigration and the increasing burden of disease.
“The shortage of health professionals is a global phenomenon and is more pronounced in low- and middle-income countries as health workers are more likely to migrate to upper-middle-income countries in search of better living and working conditions.”
City Press previously reported that Mkhize’s predecessor, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, claimed foreign nationals were overcrowding the local health system.
Speaking at the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union’s nurses’ summit in November 2018, he was quoted as saying: “The weight that foreign nationals are bringing to the country has got nothing to do with xenophobia … it’s a reality.
“Our hospitals are full, we can’t control them. When a woman is pregnant and about to deliver a baby you can’t turn her away from the hospital and say you are a foreign national … you can’t.”
Motsoaledi continued: “And when they deliver a premature baby, you have got to keep them in hospital.
“When more and more come, you can’t say the hospital is full now go away … they have to be admitted, we have got no option – and when they get admitted in large numbers, they cause overcrowding, infection control starts failing.”
In terms of immigrants being carriers of disease, the report is emphatic: “Suspicion against migrants as carriers of disease is probably the most pervasive and powerful myth related to migration and health throughout history.”
News24 previously reported that migrants and asylum seekers would have access to Gauteng’s hospitals when the National Health Insurance (NHI) is implemented.
“Migrant access to health care will not be affected in any way, the Constitution guarantees anyone access to health care.”The NHI fund guarantees that registered migrants, asylum seekers, etc. – you will still have access,” Gauteng Health MEC Bandile Masuku told News24.
Johannesburg – South Africa’s rugby star Eben Etzebeth is taking the country’s rights watchdog to the High Court over racial abuse charges against him, the body said Monday.
The 27-year-old Springbok is accused of using racist slurs against four men in August in the town of Langebaan, about 120 kilometres north of Cape Town.
He is also charged with assault after allegedly insulting, assaulting and pointing a gun at a 42-year-old homeless man.
On the same day Etzebeth played in South Africa’s World Cup win over Italy in Japan earlier this month, the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) formally lodged an application against him in equality court.
On Monday — less than a week before South Africa’s clash in Japan — the SAHRC said it had received an application from Etzebeth for the High Court to review the case and “set aside the commission’s decision to institute proceedings against him in the equality court”.
The commission added that it was deciding how to respond to the application.
SAHRC’s acting legal head Buang Jones previously said “we are sending a clear message with the case that the ‘h’ word falls into the same category as the ‘k’ word”.
The complainants, who are calling themselves the ‘Langebaan Four’, want financial compensation of more than R1 million for damages.
They also want Etzebeth to undergo a restorative process which includes an apology, anger management training and community service in Langebaan.
When family demands affect work performance or work demands undermine family obligations, the resulting stress may contribute to decreased heart health, particularly among women, a new study finds.
The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, adds another factor for doctors and patients to evaluate in treating cardiovascular problems, said the study’s senior author, Dr Itamar Santos, a professor at the University of São Paulo and a researcher in the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health.
Work-family conflicts
“There are very consistent results showing that people under higher stress have more cardiovascular disease,” he said. “We wanted to specifically study the effect of work-family conflict.”
Santos and his colleagues studied more than 11 000 workers in Brazil between ages 35 and 74. The workers filled out questionnaires based on a model that measures the impact of work on family life, and vice versa.
Their heart health was scored using questionnaires, clinical exams and laboratory results for health metrics, including smoking, body mass index, diet, physical activity, cholesterol, blood pressure and blood sugar level.
The study found lower cardiovascular health scores most evident in women who reported a variety of frequent work-family conflicts.
Experts warn chronic stress can affect the heart by increasing inflammation in the body. That can affect blood pressure and cholesterol, as well as lead to unhealthy lifestyle behaviours such as lack of sleep and exercise, poor diet and weight gain.
Dr Gina Price Lundberg, a preventive cardiologist in Atlanta and clinical director of the Emory Women’s Heart Center, said the study reinforces the need for a healthy work-life balance.
Leisure or healthy habits
“It’s a really good, well-designed study with large numbers, a good balance of men and women and lots of diversity,” said Lundberg, who wasn’t involved in the research. “I think this shows what we already felt was valid – that work-life integration is hard.
“When you work a lot, you don’t have time for leisure or healthy habits. You don’t find time to get to the gym or just have a good night’s sleep.”
Although both genders were affected, Santos said, the impact on women was greater.
“This was interesting because in our previous study, job stress alone affected men and women almost equally,” he said. “But we found that for work-family conflict, women are more affected than men. They seem to be especially susceptible to this kind of stress.”
He suggested the disparity might be explained, at least for some women, by the importance they place on family life.
Ways to reduce job stress
Lundberg agreed. “You feel the stress to fulfil the gender roles, and I think women still feel more of a need to have that nurturing home life,” she said. “Men are helping more than ever, but I think working women still feel the stress of trying to do it all.”
The Brazilian researchers plan to follow the study subjects for up to a decade.
“We want to see how these metrics of stress are associated with change in cardiovascular health over a long period, and to see how some people with the same levels of stress may have other characteristics that protect them from cardiovascular disease,” Santos said.
In the meantime, he hopes the initial findings will help persuade workplaces to look for ways to reduce stress on the job, and encourage doctors to put more emphasis on recognising stress as a component of health.
“We’re not going to eliminate stress,” Santos said. “But we should learn how to live with it to not have so many bad consequences.”
A Cape Town police officer in a police BMW was arrested on Sunday for allegedly driving under the influence following a high-speed chase with traffic police, the City’s mayoral committee member for safety, JP Smith, said on Monday.
This over a weekend that saw numerous people being arrested for driving under the influence during matric “valedictory” celebrations.
“One of those arrested was a police officer who took officers attached to the Ghost Squad on a wild chase through Khayelitsha into Eerste River at approximately 05:20 on Sunday,” said Smith.
The squad comprises unmarked vehicles and officers in civilian clothes.
The officers were on their way to an operation in Kraaifontein when they spotted a white BMW swerving across Spine Road.
“They gave chase but as the officers tried to approach the driver at a red traffic light, he sped off again, resulting in a high-speed chase that nearly resulted in him colliding with oncoming vehicles,” said Smith.
“The driver eventually lost control and hit a curb in Eerste River.”
The man was arrested for driving under the influence, and reckless and negligent driving.
He was found in possession of a firearm and when officers checked his wallet, they found his police appointment card.
“It later also emerged that the vehicle belongs to the SAPS,” said Smith.
The police have been asked to comment, and it will be added when received.
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