“I started small, what they call humble beginnings...”
“The wall deco started as a project at primary schools around Soshanguve after children were asked to tell a story through art. We then hired a professional artist to frame them,” Rampedi explains.
On his journey to being a doctor, Rampedi says peer pressure led him to apply to study medicine at Fort Hare University in the Eastern Cape, while he was in second year of his studies to become a teacher. “I come from a family of teachers and I wanted to become a teacher too, except that I wanted to become a teacher and an inspector in science, I was interested in science.
“Some of my friends with whom I was doing BSc wanted to do medicine, I applied because my friends applied, I ended up studying to become a medical doctor.
“That’s how I ended up here [in medicine]. But if I look back it’s probably where I was destined to be. I am passionate about what I do.”
Upon completing his studies in 1988, Rampedi was placed at King Edward VIII Hospital in Durban. He worked at three other state hospitals before opening a private practice in Mabopane, a township adjacent to Soshanguve, in 1990.
“I later added other services such as community health care.
“The practice gradually developed into a clinic.”
Rampedi now owns two clinics, in Mabopane and at Wonderpark in Pretoria north.
About Botshilu’s origins, he said he started small by buying a house in Soshanguve.
“It was what they call humble beginnings... I identified a house [for the surgery] and then approached a bank for a mortgage bond loan,” he says.
“I then went to companies manufacturing medicine to ask them to give me Medicine on credit and would pay after 90 days.”
Dr Rampedi’s business vision under the Phelang Bonolo Healthcare Group, in partnership with Netcare, has now expanded to more facilities including Waterfall City Hospital in Midrand, Pinehaven in Krugersdorp, Eastmed Day Clinic in Pretoria and Hartbeespoort Private Hospital.