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Medq Hospital Medical Supplies
Medq Hospital Medical Supplies
MedQ’s base of operations is in South Africa, Johannesburg, with Warehouses strategically dotted all across the country, in major cities such as Capetown, Capetown, Polokwane, Durban, Pretoria, Bloemfontein, Port Elizabeth, Pietermaritzburg, East London, Nelspruit, Kimberley, Rustenberg and Richard’s Bay. As part of our aggressive expansion drive however, we have been actively taking steps to reach non South African countries and so far we have succeeded in securing clients in Zimbabwe, Botswana, Malawi, Zambia, Mozambique, Namibia and Angola. We have also reached as far as Nigeria and Uganda in our business exploits. Stated below in tabular form is a list of cities in non-South African countries where we have supplied our products over a five year period
MedQ’s reputation as a prolific solution giver in the area of supplying Medical Consumables, Medical Equipment, Medical Disposables, Medical Furniture, Medical Apparel, Surgical Instruments and Equipment as well as First Aid kits has positioned it as one of the best Medical supplies company in South Africa. With a footprint that covers Gauteng, the Eastern Cape, Free State, Kwazulu Natal, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, North West, Northern Cape and the Western Cape, medQ is fast becoming South Africa’s leading go to solution provider for all things medical. Find them at www.medq.co.za
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Urine bags
Urine bags
A Urine bag can either be a leg bag, and is a device used to collect and hold urine. It is worn on the leg and it can be worn above or below the knee. Leg bags can be attached directly to a Foley catheter or an external condom catheter
Urine drainage bags collect urine. Your bag will attach to a catheter (tube) that is inside your bladder. You may have a catheter and urine drainage bag because you have urinary incontinence (leakage), urinary retention (not being able to urinate), surgery that made a catheter necessary, or another health problem.
Empty your leg bag at regular intervals to avoid it becoming too full and heavy, which may pull on your catheter. This should occur every 2 to 3 hours or when the bag is about half to three-quarters full.
It’s possible to live a relatively normal life with a long-term urinary catheter, although it may take some getting used to at first.