Dr Muhadditha Al Hashimi: Primary carer
by Edward Poultney on Tuesday, 01 May 2007
Al Hashimi is quick to underline that this is what is setting DHCC apart from the competition.
"Our standards are a unique concept over here. There are a lot of hospitals outside the facility, they are mushrooming all over the place, but many of them don't go through the rigid process that we put our people through to ensure quality."
"The quality of healthcare is only as good as the person giving the diagnosis, if your physician has the best credentials then the service will be the best," she explains.
"We have very stringent requirements and we're very proud to say that many people did not get licensed by DHCC because they failed to meet our standards."
The second major differentiation between DHCC and the other regional healthcare projects is the emphasis being placed on teaching, something dear to Al Hashimi's own heart - she was Dean of the Health Sciences programme at the Dubai Higher College of Technology prior to joining DHCC.
"We are not offering an undergraduate degree because there is no need, there are four institutions that offer it, but we are addressing postgraduate education," she says.
"Our intention is to attract these trainees to come and work at DHCC and the wider region as well, so that they don't feel that they have to leave the country to pursue their schooling."
The concept of education is one that Al Hashimi embraces personally and she firmly believes that the learning process continues throughout a company head's professional development.
"For the first nine months following my appointment I was very ‘hands on' because I needed to be," she says, "I needed to know the business; it was about the challenges of the role and the responsibility the position entailed."
"Now I can become more ‘hands off' very easily," she continues.
"My senior leadership team is quite empowered. They are in their positions because I've trusted them to become directors of those sectors. I want them to use their judgement to the best of their ability."
Keeping in touch with ground level developments is also very important to Al Hashimi and, fittingly, her executive style mixes medicine with management.
"I have a daily routine which I follow as much as possible, which is that I do my ‘rounds'," she says.
"Physicians do this on a daily basis where they check up on their patients and I have tried to bring this into healthcare administration too.
"I walk around the organisation, stop by and see what staff are working on, see if there is anything I can do to help and things like that."
"I want there to be complete transparency at all levels, the way that we have designed the offices with glass doors everywhere is a reflection of this open door policy," she adds.
The pastoral support strategy extends to succession and career planning for DHCC employees.
"When you are in a position like this you are now told that you have to find your successor," Al Hashimi says.
"You have to make sure that the next level are equipped to take on new responsibility, people are competing for roles through their credentials and training and you have to help them attain this."
Al Hashimi's policy of constant support for those around her is something that she learnt from her father, the person that she sites as her primary personal role model when she was growing up and intent on pursuing her career.
"He is the person that I look up to for inspiration, he has always been supportive," she says.
"When I graduated from high school in the 1980s, I went against all odds to go to the US.
"He was a firm supporter through all the challenges you face by going to a new country; even the times when I thought I couldn't do it and wanted to come back he would say to me ‘if you want to come back it's fine, but remember your future'.
"I think he is the main force behind my achievements," she smiles.
Forging ahead despite the odds is a lesson that Al Hashimi has taken on board.
"I think that the reason behind my success is that I never gave up - I reached for my goal, and then I set another and tried to reach that," she says proudly. "If you are determined you will do it, I am a strong believer in that."
When applied to DHCC Al Hashimi is confident that the strategy of ever-expanding goals is one which will return impressive dividends. In the next five years she sees the group having a much wider presence.
"Hopefully we will have rapidly expanded outside the region, with franchises perhaps," she says.
"My ambition is for DHCC to be in the Gulf, in India, in different areas - I want to duplicate our experience here."
And, as the first phase of DHCC's establishment nears completion and with the strategies in place to nurture the brand, these projected goals do not seem so far out of reach.
READERS' COMMENTS
MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM
TOP IN MIDDLE EAST HEALTHCARE
TOP MIDDLE EAST BUSINESS STORIES
ALSO IN MIDDLE EAST HEALTHCARE
SHARE PRICE CHECK
RELATED STORIES
Dubai Healthcare City (DHCC)
- Healthy returns
15 Jun '09 | Interviews - Transport, healthcare key to Dubai's future
30 May '09 | News - Hospital builds total $14bn across Gulf despite crisis
30 May '09 | News





