Adventa

Adventa Berhad (MYX: 7191) is a Malaysian holding company. It was founded in 2004. Adventa initially invested in the glove-making business. In 2012, the group divested the glove business to Aspion. The group then acquired Electron Beam and Lucenxia, which led them into the health care businesses. Their business also includes distribution and third-party logistics (3PL) for other health care companies.

Adventa Berhad
Publicly traded company
Traded asMYX: 7191
ISINMYL7191OO009
IndustryHealth care
Founded2004
HeadquartersNo 21, Jalan Tandang 51/205A, Seksyen 51, 46050 Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Edmond Cheah Swee Leng, Chairman
ProductsHealth care products, medical products
Revenue RM 34.797 million (2014)
RM 4.330 million (2014)
SubsidiariesList of subsidiaries
Websitewww.adventa.com.my

In 2013, the group signed a partnership with Crawford Healthcare Limited, a United Kingdom healthcare company, to distribute the wound care products, Kerra™.[1] The firm set up a new online portal, MyCare www.mycare.com.my, selling healthcare and beauty products.

In 2014, the company will start its home renal dialysis service, which is known as the company's flagship business.

Adventa secured a 3-year contract with Parkway Malaysia, Singapore and Turkey. Contributions may be seen from Q2 year 2015 onwards.

Subsidiaries

The group has multiple subsidiaries. Sun Healthcare Sdn. Bhd. delivers medical and healthcare supplies. Electron Beam Sdn. Bhd. provides commercial and industrial sterilization of medical devices and other sterilizable products. Lucenxia (M) Sdn. Bhd. offers home renal dialysis services.[2]

gollark: Apparently Unicode has an invisible comma character. It looks like this: ⁣. One must wonder why they thought this was necessary.
gollark: Anyone know where I can find a large dataset of privacy policies, for neural network training?
gollark: <@498244879894315027> Firstly, you could probably try and just use some existing packet capture tool for this. Secondly, seriously what are you doing?! I don't think trying to replay IP or Ethernet packets (whatever gets sent to the network card) has any chance of working to meddle with a higher-level service.
gollark: I suspect it's whatever you're doing to bptr after each broadcast. That looks dubious and the log says it's a "loadprohibited" error, which sounds like something memory.
gollark: I don't think this affects *me* very badly, since my configured disk encryption all runs in software without any weird TPM interaction, I don't use "secure" boot, and it seems like this would need physical access or unrealistically good timing, but it's still not very good.

References

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