Local newsNews

The train of life in Tzaneen

Tzaneen residents were granted an opportunity to access primary health care at lower prices from the Transnet Phelophepha Health train.

The train started opening its doors to the local residents from Monday, June 24 and they will be open until Friday, July 5 from 08:00 to 16:00.

KwaZulu Natal was the first stop for the train followed by Mpumalanga and now Limpopo.

Musina was the first stop in the province followed by Tzaneen then Polokwane and it will then move to Mokopane and Mokgophong as the next stop respectively.

Final year optometry students with Bheki Mendlula, Phelophepha Train Manager dressed in black shirt.

The train consisted of four sections the psychology, dental, optometry and health clinic.

   Also read:  TZANEEN: Phelophepha Health train back in town

“We also offer free screening of cancer, breast cancer, pap smear and prostate cancer, because we have realised that many people are still ignorant when it comes to checking cancer signs,” explained Bheki Mendlula, Train Manager.

Locals working on the Phelophepha Health train.

Eye glasses were R30 each, R5 per prescription at the health clinic and R10 for all dental procedures.

The team also visited some local communities where they rendered community services by teaching different kinds of skills.

Nancy Makalela, Monica Mathonsi, Try again Matari, Lintjie Maganyi and Thembani Homu, some of the locals who worked at the Phelophepha train.

As part of the social responsibility Transnet also takes in final year students who are monitored by a group of qualified professionals in the train.

The students were working hand in hand with the professional staff for an opportunity to work with the community and for practical purposes.

The local economy was also boosted after local unemployed residents and retired nurses were hired in the train.

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Letaba Herald in Google News and Top Stories.

Emelda Tintswalo Shipalana

Tintswalo Shipalana, a journalist for the Letaba Herald, has been in the media industry for over a decade. She started her journey in radio, but ended up in print which is her first love. She joined the Herald newspaper as a cadet in 2016, where she graduated with a journalism qualification from the Caxton Training Academy. She also has a qualification in Feature Writing from the University of Cape Town and a Media Management qualification from Wits University. She is completing her BA Communication Science degree with UNISA. She sleeps well at night knowing she is a voice to the voiceless and her work contributes to promoting local talent, businesses and service delivery. Her love for her community keeps her working hard every day.

Related Articles

Back to top button