Thursday, December 1, 2016

Watch Live Surgery Online - Saudi Gazette




More and more doctors are becoming a part of the movement. Most celebrity doctors showcase their surgeries daily on Snapchat and other social media outlets. These are largely related to aesthetic surgery contributing to the growing interest of patients who are lately going for small and ‘quick fix’ procedures.

We got in touch with Dr. Alexandru Karkhi,  based in Romania who will be showcasing live tomorrow. He is the first doctor to perform a worldwide live stream surgery for a dental implant placement. Tomorrow’s surgery is about dental implants. But, unlike the traditional type, he will demonstrate a modern technique that is called ‘Minimal Invasive Surgery’ and this defines the concept of ‘Teeth in one day’......

read more:
Watch Live Surgery Online - Saudi Gazette

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Bupa Arabia opens free over-the-phone medical advice service to public - Saudi Gazette



 JEDDAH — Bupa Arabia, the largest specialized healthcare company in the Kingdom, has set out to benefit the community by opening its over-the-phone medical advice service, at no cost.

An integral part of the Tebtom program is the ‘Doctor on Phone’ service, providing health advice and answers any medical questions to both Bupa Arabia members and non-members. This service is available 24/7 and easily accessible by simply calling Tebtom’s
toll-free number (800-440-4040) or through web chat (www.bupa.com.sa),....

 read more:

Bupa Arabia opens free over-the-phone medical advice service to public - Saudi Gazette

Breast cancer: Be a survivor not a victim - Saudi Gazette



EVER since I was a teenager, I have heard of an enemy who is as close to us women as our heart. It is an enemy which has no ethnicity, color or faith and who will not consider your social status, position or religious denomination. It is an inhuman nemesis which has been known to mankind since ancient times, when it was described as a disease that
has no cure.....

 read more:
Breast cancer: Be a survivor not a victim - Saudi Gazette

Friday, November 18, 2016

Health Ministry warns against overuse of antibiotics | Arab News


 RIYADH: The Ministry of Health has carried out a week long awareness
campaign on the careful use of antibiotics under the slogan
“Antibiotics: Handle with Care.”

The activities of the World
Antibiotic Awareness Week were organized by the Ministry of Health (MoH)
in collaboration with the Ministry of Environment, Water and
Agriculture and the World Health Organization (WHO).


An official from
the Ministry of Health told Arab News that the ministry has started
these activities to raise awareness about bacterial resistance to
antibiotics, as well as encouraging the public, health workers and
policy makers to follow the best practices to avoid the detection of
more cases of antibiotic resistance.......



 read more:

Health Ministry warns against overuse of antibiotics | Arab News

Sunday, October 30, 2016

The Courier » Weekend Doctor

The Courier » Weekend Doctor



 Taking medicine is a normal routine for many people, but there are many
aspects to think about to avoid unwanted interactions. Age, weight, sex,
medical conditions, dose of medicine, other medications, vitamins and
herbal supplements can affect any drug taken.



Some drugs can work faster, slower, better or worse on an empty stomach
while others will upset an empty stomach. Alcohol also has significant
effects on medication use. Drinking alcohol while taking medication, or
before and after, can affect how the drug works in the body.

When a food affects medications in the body, this is called food-drug
interaction. Food can prevent medicine from working the way it should
and can cause medicinal side effects to become better or worse and/or
cause new side effects.

Saturday, May 14, 2016

MoH races against time to align its efforts with Vision 2030 | Arab News




 JEDDAH: The Health Ministry has forecast revenue of SR4 billion by 2020 because of a major financial overhaul that includes implementation of an insurance system, attracting new investments, and raising funds from conferences and exhibitions, local media reported Friday.

This is according to Aqab Abboud, supervisor of the ministry’s health economics department, who said that revenue was only SR30 million seven years ago. It grew to SR350 million in 2015, and likely to rise to SR500 million at the end of this year, he said.

“We are racing against time across all districts to align our efforts with Vision 2030, especially regarding the application of the Cooperative Health Insurance System at all the ministry’s hospitals, medical cities, clinics, laboratories, heart centers and poison centers,” he said.

“Approval from the Cooperative Health Council, training of employees, development of the electronic financial system, and preparation of sites is all being done in parallel,” he was quoted as saying.....

read more:
MoH races against time to align its efforts with Vision 2030 | Arab News

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Hospitals ban snapping photos - Arab News




RIYADH: Some government hospitals have issued regulations under which those caught taking photos on the premises will be prosecuted.
These orders coincide with the increased phenomenon of taking photos inside health facilities with the purpose of publishing them on social media, either to defame the facility or point out faults in their working. 

Signs have been put up in some private hospitals, including King Khalid Eye Specialty Hospital in Riyadh, saying anyone caught taking photographs will be penalized with the confiscation of their devices. Hospital sources said that anyone who refuses to hand in their devices will face police action.

Some government bodies, including the Ministry of Education, have announced similar decisions that prevent photography inside facilities unless they have an official permit.

The Anti-Information Technology Crime Law has 16 articles and defines a punishment for each crime, starting with imprisonment for one year and a maximum fine of SR500,000 for minor offenses, or a minimum of 10 years in jail and SR5 million for more serious offenses. However, the law does not provide for the official confiscation of devices, leading to criticism from some citizens, reported Al-Watan newspaper.....

read more:
http://www.arabnews.com/news/hospitals-ban-snapping-photos

Monday, April 25, 2016

Rise in C-section births alarming | Arab News



 RIYADH: The rate of babies delivered by Caesarean section in Saudi Arabia is growing alarmingly with the nationwide increase reflecting an upward trend in these cases in recent years.

A cross section of medical experts expressed concerns Saturday over the fact that caesarian delivery cases surged by 67 percent in the country last year.

A similar trend was noticed in the first quarter of 2016 with experts saying that the reasons behind the surge are preventable.


read more:
Rise in C-section births alarming | Arab News

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Beat diabetes with proper food, says expert | Arab News




RIYADH: Obesity is increasing in the Kingdom at an alarming rate and it will eventually lead to diabetes causing renal, cardiac, dental and eye diseases, said a senior official at a Riyadh-based company.

Vikrant Shrotriya of Novo Nordisk was speaking to Arab News about this year’s WHO theme, “Beat Diabetes,” to mark the World Health Day on Thursday.

“The theme is a timely choice, since there are 350 million diabetics in the world and this is expected to be doubled by 2040, and the world spends some $673 billion to treat and prevent the disease,” he said, pointing out that the deaths cause by diabetes is much more than any other disease in the world.

 Nearly 1.5 million people die of diabetes every year, according to WHO.
“One in every 11 persons become a victim of the disease,” said Shrotriya. “It is a silent killer if not properly treated.”


read more:

Beat diabetes with proper food, says expert | Arab News

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Short film highlights patient rights in Kingdom’s hospitals - Saudi Gazette





JEDDAH – Jeddah’s Culture and Arts Association has screened a short film, “Treat me with Kindness,” aimed at educating the public about their rights in the Kingdom’s hospitals and focusing on the issues patients often face.

Bad customer service from hospital employees, difficulty communicating with nurses and a lack of available hospital appointments are some of the issues highlighted in the movie.
The film, directed by Abdulrahman Mirza, does not blame any single party for the poor customer service in Jeddah’s hospitals, and instead tries to present the reality of healthcare in the city and also educate the public.

 The crew who worked on the film have a medical and health background, and decided to produce the movie after observing hospital conditions and witnessing complaints from patients and their families.

read more:
Short film highlights patient rights in Kingdom ’s hospitals - Saudi Gazette

Saturday, April 2, 2016

Health Day dedicated to diabetes awareness | Arab News




 RIYADH: A statistical report stated that diabetes in the Gulf has reached record numbers, with rates reaching between 12 to 24 percent, and increasing as people get older.

Rates are 8 percent in people under 35 years old, while those over 65 years old form 50.4 percent, and the percentages are expected to increase by the year 2030 to reach 24 to 50 percent.

The report pointed out that diabetes among Bahrain is is around 40 percent in people over 40 years; in Oman rates increase to reach 12 percent in adults; Kuwait has 22.4 percent; the United Arab Emirates has 19.6 percent.

This year, Global Health Day (April 7) is allocated to educate people about diabetes, said Mishari bin Hamad Al-Dakhil, general supervisor of the public directorate for nutrition in the Ministry of Health.

 Diabetes is spreading in an epidemic manner which makes it a risk at the national level. The importance of this concerns the increased rates of chronic complications due to diabetes, which increases the total costs of treating it.

 read more:
Health Day dedicated to diabetes awareness | Arab News

One in five adults may be obese by 2025, says survey | Arab News



 PARIS: One in five adults could be obese by 2025, said a major survey Friday that warned of a looming epidemic of “severe obesity” with significant health and economic costs.
The ratio of obese adults has more than doubled in the 40 years since 1975, and will climb further in the coming nine, the research showed.

Of about five billion adults alive in 2014, 641 million were obese, it found. The figure was set to exceed 1.1 billion by 2025.

 “There will be health consequences of magnitudes that we do not know,” author Majid Ezzati of Imperial College London told AFP of the research published by The Lancet medical journal.
“Obesity and especially severe and morbid obesity, affect many organs and physiological processes.

 read more:

One in five adults may be obese by 2025, says survey | Arab News

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Fighting infectious diseases | Arab News




 Combating antimicrobial resistance will require groundbreaking technological solutions. To prevent superbugs from claiming an estimated 10 million lives a year by 2050, we will need to invent new types of antimicrobial drugs and develop rapid diagnostic tests to avoid unnecessary treatment and cut our massive overuse of antibiotics.

And yet, as important as these high-tech contributions may be, they are only partial fixes. To tackle the problem permanently, the only option is to prevent infections from occurring in the first place — with improved hygiene, sanitation and disease surveillance. Indeed, only by focusing on these areas will we lower the demand for new drugs over the long term.

 read more:
Fighting infectious diseases | Arab News

read more articles by the writer Jim O'Neil :
 http://www.arabnews.com/author/Jim%20O'Neill

Sunday, March 27, 2016

90% of Saudi children have tooth decay, says expert | Arab News



RIYADH: Some 90 percent of children are suffering from tooth decay in some parts of the Kingdom, with the Eastern Province having the lowest rates of infection, an expert told attendees at an oral hygiene event in Riyadh.

Dr. Salwa Al-Sadhan, head of Community Service at King Saud University’s Faculty of Medicine, said this at the event which focused on the importance of oral health.

 She said that students of the Faculty of Medicine are repeatedly visiting schools to spread awareness of oral health among students and to show them how to properly brush their teeth to prevent decay.

 read more:
90% of Saudi children have tooth decay, says expert | Arab News

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Saudi females prove their mettle in operation theaters - Saudi Gazette




THE Ministry of Health’s statistics on the number of doctors showed that there are 71,000 male and female physicians in the Kingdom, of whom 17,000 are Saudis. The number of female Saudi doctors is 5,500, accounting for 32 percent of the total number of Saudi doctors and 7 percent of the number of doctors in the country.

Though the statistics do not say how many of the female doctors are surgeons, there are only a few in this field. But one thing is sure: female surgeons have proven themselves in this difficult field and won the admiration of the general public and the medical field. These women are able to enter the operation theaters, hold knives and scalpels and operate with confidence.

 read more:
Saudi females prove their mettle in operation theaters - Saudi Gazette

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Haia is ‘creating problems’ for women in public pharmacies - Saudi Gazette





JEDDAH — A member of the pharmacies committee at the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI) has alleged that the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (Haia) is hindering the employment of women in public pharmacies.

Ibrahim Al-Badawi said the commission is hindering the employment of female pharmacists even though the workplace adheres to all the rules and regulations.

“The commission seems to be targeting public pharmacies and turning its eyes away from private pharmacies inside shopping centers. The public pharmacies will have a partition separating men from women working there,” said Al-Badawi.

He also said the commission is pushing investors into opening pharmacies that are for women only.

 “Investors are not inclined to do so because it limits their customers. The committee is responsible for facilitating the investment process and enabling investors in the industry. With such a push, investors feel they are up to lose more than gaining money if they invested in a women-only pharmacy,” said Al-Badawi.

read more:
Haia is ‘creating problems’ for women in public pharmacies - Saudi Gazette

Getting your hypertension under control | Arab News


Dr. Abdul Hameed: lifestyle changes need to be made; on top of it is to quit smoking

Millions of people worldwide are either overweight or obese. It seems as though many people in modern societies are living a life that leads to high blood pressure or hypertension. However, as people age, the situation gets worse. Nearly half of all old aged people have hypertension.

 This disease makes people more prone to strokes, three times more likely to have a heart attack, and two to three times more likely to experience a heart failure.


Studies indicate that it is because of the types of foods that are consumed; such as foods that are high in fat, especially saturated fats can cause hypertension. In addition to that, using a lot of salt has also been linked to high blood pressure. Yet, lack of exercise and obesity are also among the causes of hypertension........

 read more:
Getting your hypertension under control | Arab News

More doctors are prescribing exercise instead of medication | Arab News





BOSTON: When Dr. Michelle Johnson scribbles out prescriptions, the next stop for many of her patients is the gym, not the pharmacy.
Doctors treating chronic health problems increasingly are prescribing exercise for their patients — and encouraging them to think of physical activity as their new medication.

In one such program run by a health center in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood, primary care physicians, internists and psychologists prescribe access to a gym for $10 a month, including free child care, classes and kids programs. Providing affordable gym access for patients ensures compliance, said Gibbs Saunders of Healthworks Community Fitness, a nonprofit gym in Dorchester that has partnered with several health care providers to help low-income residents fill their exercise prescriptions.


 read more:
More doctors are prescribing exercise instead of medication | Arab News

Sunday, February 28, 2016

KSA to set up S. Korean system in govt. hospitals | Arab News



 South Korea will help Saudi Arabia in setting up a “Hospital Information System” (HIS) and and a disease control systemin state-run hospitals, a Korean official Embassy said on Thursday.

“This is included in the framework of cooperation to strengthen the health care partnership
between the two countries, which was signed during the South Korean minister’s recent Riyadh visit,” he said.

Currently, six hospitals here are working with a consortium of South Korean hospitals and
companies to establish the HIS, an automated system that controls the overall management of hospital........

 read more:

KSA to set up S. Korean system in govt. hospitals | Arab News

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Genetic disease named after Saudi doctor | Arab News




John Hopkins University has named a new genetic disease after a Saudi woman doctor for contributing to research around the illness. Wafa bint Mohammad Al-Eyaid, a consultant in endocrine diseases and genetics at the King Abdulaziz Medical City, Ministry of the National Guard in Riyadh, followed 12 cases involving six Saudi families between 2002 and 2010.

She found that the children were born underweight despite seemingly normal periods of pregnancy, and had significant softness of the skin around their necks and elsewhere. All of them had heart defects, with some having undergone surgery.

read more:

Genetic disease named after Saudi doctor | Arab News

Monday, February 22, 2016

Al-Falih to open conference focusing on patients’ rights | Arab News


 Health Minister Khalid Al-Falih will inaugurate the 1st Gulf Patient Rights Conference on Feb. 28 at King Faisal Conference Hall at the Riyadh InterContinental Hotel. The three-day conference will tackle a host of issues related to patient rights either from the theoretical or applied perspectives.

The issues include the current state of patient rights practices, role of health facilities and health team members, and regulatory authorities and educational, professional and
legal institutions in promoting patient rights....

 read more:

Al-Falih to open conference focusing on patients’ rights | Arab News

2,000 medical students to visit schools - Saudi Gazette


  A total of 2,000 medical students specializing in pediatrics will visit schools to offer free checkups and diagnoses to pupils of all ages. King Abdulaziz University Children’s Health Campaign Supervisor Dr. Abdulmueen Al-Agha said the campaign addresses children’s health and well being.
“A team of 2,000 medical students will be visiting several schools across 25 cities and governorates. The campaign started on Sunday and will continue until the end of the semester. This campaign is the biggest volunteering health campaign organized by medical students,” said Al-Agha. He said the campaign will be visiting primary and middle schools for both girls and boys......

read more: 
2,000 medical students to visit schools - Saudi Gazette

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Are we all addicts? - Saudi Gazette


WHEN we think of addiction, we often think of substance abuse. This may include drugs, alcohol or even cigarettes. But what if I told you that we were all addicts but to a different substance something that we are constantly surrounded with in our daily lives, and which is eight times more addictive than cocaine? Sugar.

Take your own personal experience as an example. You have had your dinner and are quite satisfied, even full, but then you are introduced to the dessert table. What do you do? You will probably end up having a piece of cake. If you don’t, you will at least be tempted. Why is that? Are we unable to control our cravings?............

 read more:

Are we all addicts? - Saudi Gazette

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Ministry of Health sets austerity plan - Saudi Gazette



  The Ministry of Health (MOH) will reduce the payment of bonuses and overtime, cut travel expenses and pharmaceutical purchases and bids for projects should not exceed the budget as part of its austerity measures.

 The ministry announced that all establishments working under it are to only employ doctors with expertise in rare fields. The ministry also announced that contracts must only require doctors to work for 90 days a year, said a source.....

 read more:

Ministry of Health sets austerity plan - Saudi Gazette

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Ministry of Health to require employees to declare assets | Arab News




 The Ministry of Health is considering imposing an asset declaration as well as an absence of interest conflict testimony on its employees as a measure in fighting corruption. Health Minister Khalid Al-Falih made the announcement at a one-day forum on promoting integrity and combating corruption in the health care sector.

The forum was organized by the National Anti-Corruption Commission (Nazaha) in collaboration with the Council of Health Service which is chaired by the minister. “Integrity should be the foundation of the health sector; otherwise people’s health and lives will be jeopardized in the very place entrusted with protecting them,” he said, stressing his ministry’s determination to eliminate corruption and misbehavior.


 read more:

Ministry of Health to require employees to declare assets | Arab News

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Why you can't just wipe out mosquitoes to get rid of the Zika virus - Saudi Gazette



On Saturday Colombia’s national health institute confirmed that more than 2,100 pregnant Colombian women are infected with the Zika virus, which has been linked to a devastating birth defect that affects a fetus’ brain.

The mosquito-borne disease, for which there is no vaccine or treatment, has been quickly spreading across the Americas since May, when the first confirmed Zika infection was reported in Brazil. More than 4 million people could be infected by the end of the year,
according to the World Health Organization.


 read more:

Why you can't just wipe out mosquitoes to get rid of the Zika virus - Saudi Gazette

Ghada Al-Mutairi — Saudi scientist who changed the concept of surgery - Saudi Gazette



 An ambitious Saudi woman has yet again proved sky is the limit for excellence. Ghada Mutlaq Al-Mutairi, 39, received a $3 million global innovation award from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the largest organization supporting medical research in the United States, for her invention that changed the way surgical procedures are carried out in the country.

Al-Mutairi, who holds a doctorate in materials chemistry, currently lives in the US. She is a faculty member at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) and director of the Center of Excellence in Nanomedicine.

 read more:

Ghada Al-Mutairi — Saudi scientist who changed the concept of surgery - Saudi Gazette

Friday, February 5, 2016

Hemophilia: Trained staff needed | Arab News


 Dr. Hazzaa Al-Zahrani, director of hematology and fellowship training programs at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center in Riyadh, has warned against the increasing risk of hemophilia in the Gulf region.
He said about 75 percent of the people suffering from the bleeding disorder in developing countries do not receive enough or adequate treatment, or none at all, because health systems in these countries already have enough on their hands among health problems such
as dealing with malignant and infectious diseases.

read more:

Hemophilia: Trained staff needed | Arab News

Sakaka hospital scores a first | Arab News


 A medical team at a hospital in Sakaka successfully conducted the first laparoscopic procedure of its kind in the region by using this modern technique.
The medical team, headed by Dr. Sami Al-Asari at the King Abdul Aziz Specialist Hospital, operated on a 60-year-old Saudi woman to remove a 40cm long stone in her small intestine through laparoscopic surgery.

Laparoscopic surgery is a procedure that uses a thin, lighted tube put through a cut or incision in the abdomen.  Director General of Health Affairs in Al-Jouf Hussein Al-Ruwaidi thanked Al-Asari and his team for their medical achievement.

Talking about the procedure, Al-Asari said that when the patient was brought to the hospital’s emergency department, she was suffering from extreme pain. “The patient also complained of frequent vomiting,” said Al-Asari, also the hospital’s department of surgery head and general and colorectal surgery department consultant.

 read more:

Sakaka hospital scores a first | Arab News

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

‘Designer’ babies possible: ‘Gene editing’ given green light | Arab News


British scientists have been given the go-ahead by the fertility regulator to genetically modify human embryos, BBC has reported. It is the first time a country has considered the DNA-altering technique in embryos and approved it, said the global channel.

The research will take place at the Francis Crick Institute in London and
aims to provide a deeper understanding of the earliest moments of human
life.

 read more:

‘Designer’ babies possible: ‘Gene editing’ given green light | Arab News

50 AIDS counseling clinics in Riyadh planned | Arab News



Fifty AIDS counseling clinics will be opened in health centers and hospitals in Riyadh soon.
These centers will have separate departments for both men and women, said Mohammad Al-Dhafeeri, director of the AIDS program. The measures will be taken to prevent a rise in AIDS cases.

 read more:

50 AIDS counseling clinics in Riyadh planned | Arab News

Kingdom alive to Zika virus threat | Arab News



Saudi Aabia has been taking preventive measures against the Zika virus, which is fast becoming a global concern. Zika is an emerging mosquito-borne virus that was first identified in humans in 1952 in Uganda and Tanzania.  Its outbreaks have been recorded in Africa, the Americas, Asia and the Pacific thus far.

 Faisal Al-Zahrani, Health Ministry spokesman, told Arab News that even Health Minister Khalid Al-Falih has emphasized preventive measures taken by all countries in the region against the virus.

 read more:

Kingdom alive to Zika virus threat | Arab News

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

How 1 hospital managed to ride out the storm - WTOP





We can all learn from this hospital.

WASHINGTON — It’s business as usual at local hospitals after a storm
that paralyzed the D.C. area. They functioned smoothly through the worst
of it, in large part because they planned ahead.

At Adventist Health Care Shady Grove Medical Center, as at most of
the region’s hospitals, planning started well before the blizzard
struck. Instead of making hospital staff scramble to get to work in the
snow, the decision was made that they would shelter in place during the
storm — taking up residence in empty hospital beds......

 read more:

How 1 hospital managed to ride out the storm - WTOP

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Two fresh MERS cases reported | Arab News


 RIYADH: The Ministry of Health has announced the detection of two new
cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV).
The cases involve a 58-year-old in Jeddah and an 85-year-old in Al-Muznab.
“The patients are in stable condition and under treatment. Their ailment has
been  attributed to exposure to camel,” a report quoted the MoH as
saying......

 read more:

Two fresh MERS cases reported | Arab News

Organ transplant cases increase 300 percent | Arab News


JEDDAH: The number of transplant cases in the Kingdom increased 300
percent during 2015 in comparison with 2014, with the transplant of 778
kidneys, an increase of 24 percent, of which 634 were from live patients
and 144 from brain-dead donors.

King Faisal Specialty Hospital and Research Center in Jeddah ranked first in kidney
transplant surgeries, with 187 surgeries, an increase of 40 percent over the previous
 year. The research center in King Faisal Specialty Hospital in Riyadh came second
 with 181 transplants; King Fahd Specialty Hospital in Dammam came third with
131 transplants; Prince Sultan Medical Military City in Riyadh came fourth with
 91 cases; and King Abdulaziz Medical City for the National Guard ranked
 fifth with 52 transplants........

read more:

Organ transplant cases increase 300 percent | Arab News

Sunday, January 17, 2016

Why You Can Get So Many Diseases from Mosquitoes | TIME


Zika virus, the latest mosquito-borne virus to hit the United States, joins a long list of other infections the insects can carry, like malaria, dengue fever, chikungunya and West Nile. How can these bugs—so tiny that we often miss them at first swipe—be responsible for so many infections? It turns out their vampire-like tendencies are largely to blame.....

 read more:
Why You Can Get So Many Diseases from Mosquitoes | TIME

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

SFHP, Riyadh (Nursing Department)




Published on Aug 10, 2014
SFH, Riyadh - Nursing Department

Tour the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.




Published on Sep 8, 2012
The staff of Helen Ziegler and Associates,North America's preeminent recruiter for healthcare jobs in the Middle East, made this video to provide a glimpse of what life is like on-site at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.