Sunday World (South Africa)

“I started small, what they call humble beginnings...”

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“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.

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