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Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective

Mining sites are often located in rural and remote communities where healthcare services are either unaffordable or unavailable to mine employees. To address this problem, mining companies may elect to establish and manage mine hospitals to provide vital healthcare services to their employees and th...

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Main Author: Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere
Other Authors: Mostert, Hanri
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Private Law 2020
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere
author2 Mostert, Hanri
author_browse Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere
Mostert, Hanri
author_facet Mostert, Hanri
Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere
author_sort Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere
collection Thesis
description Mining sites are often located in rural and remote communities where healthcare services are either unaffordable or unavailable to mine employees. To address this problem, mining companies may elect to establish and manage mine hospitals to provide vital healthcare services to their employees and the surrounding communities. Mining companies often have the financial capacity to establish state-of-the-art facilities with medical equipment and technology required for the diagnosis and treatment of diseases, including diseases prevalent in the mining industry. The role of mine hospitals extends beyond the development of health infrastructure and the provision of healthcare services. Mine hospitals contribute to the economic development of mine-affected communities. Mine hospitals create employment opportunities that increase disposable income in mine-affected communities and boost local economic activities. Additionally, mining companies can promote local procurement by purchasing goods and services needed for their mine hospitals from local suppliers. Notwithstanding the positive socio-economic impacts of mine hospitals in mineaffected communities, the closure or ownership and management transfer of mine hospitals can have adverse effects on mine-affected communities. These adverse effects include the poor management of mine hospitals, the termination or suspension of healthcare services, and job losses. Therefore, responsible mine hospital closure and transfer practices must be implemented by mining companies to prevent or minimise these adverse effects. This minor dissertation examines the history, role, and function of mine hospitals in mine-affected communities in South Africa. It evaluates the positive and negative (specifically mine hospital closures and ownership and management transfers) impacts of mine hospitals on mine-affected communities. Based on the role and function of mine hospitals and their impacts on mine-affected communities, the dissertation recommends that certain aspects of mine hospitals are governed differently from general private hospitals and standard workplace-based systems. It proposes specific legislative requirements and procedures for the establishment, ownership and management transfer; and closure of mine hospitals. Additionally, the dissertation makes recommendations on the roles of the government, mining companies, and mine-affected communities in the establishment, transfer, and closure processes.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:39.476Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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publisher Department of Private Law
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32282 Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere Mostert, Hanri Mineral Law Mining sites are often located in rural and remote communities where healthcare services are either unaffordable or unavailable to mine employees. To address this problem, mining companies may elect to establish and manage mine hospitals to provide vital healthcare services to their employees and the surrounding communities. Mining companies often have the financial capacity to establish state-of-the-art facilities with medical equipment and technology required for the diagnosis and treatment of diseases, including diseases prevalent in the mining industry. The role of mine hospitals extends beyond the development of health infrastructure and the provision of healthcare services. Mine hospitals contribute to the economic development of mine-affected communities. Mine hospitals create employment opportunities that increase disposable income in mine-affected communities and boost local economic activities. Additionally, mining companies can promote local procurement by purchasing goods and services needed for their mine hospitals from local suppliers. Notwithstanding the positive socio-economic impacts of mine hospitals in mineaffected communities, the closure or ownership and management transfer of mine hospitals can have adverse effects on mine-affected communities. These adverse effects include the poor management of mine hospitals, the termination or suspension of healthcare services, and job losses. Therefore, responsible mine hospital closure and transfer practices must be implemented by mining companies to prevent or minimise these adverse effects. This minor dissertation examines the history, role, and function of mine hospitals in mine-affected communities in South Africa. It evaluates the positive and negative (specifically mine hospital closures and ownership and management transfers) impacts of mine hospitals on mine-affected communities. Based on the role and function of mine hospitals and their impacts on mine-affected communities, the dissertation recommends that certain aspects of mine hospitals are governed differently from general private hospitals and standard workplace-based systems. It proposes specific legislative requirements and procedures for the establishment, ownership and management transfer; and closure of mine hospitals. Additionally, the dissertation makes recommendations on the roles of the government, mining companies, and mine-affected communities in the establishment, transfer, and closure processes. 2020-09-16T10:08:09Z 2020-09-16T10:08:09Z 2020 2020-09-15T17:06:50Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32282 eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Mineral Law
Kabuzi, Doreen Nabisere
Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective
title_full Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective
title_fullStr Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective
title_short Towards a Framework for Regulating the Sustainability of Mine Hospitals: A Legal Perspective
title_sort towards a framework for regulating the sustainability of mine hospitals a legal perspective
topic Mineral Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32282
work_keys_str_mv AT kabuzidoreennabisere towardsaframeworkforregulatingthesustainabilityofminehospitalsalegalperspective