A chance supermarket encounter in the 1970s set the course for Anita Steel’s career and ultimately led to an audience with a man who would be King
A woman from Swansea has recently celebrated two major milestones – her 70th birthday and over a century working for the NHS. Fifty-two years ago, a chance encounter in a supermarket set the course for Anita Steel’s career and ultimately led to an audience with the now King Charles.
While employed at Tesco as a 17-year-old mother, a recommendation to “give working in the NHS a go” proved far more fruitful than Anita could have imagined. That conversation resulted in more than half a century of service for Swansea Bay University Health Board, where Anita continues to work.
Her remarkable dedication to the health board gained additional recognition following her recent 70th birthday milestone. Never miss a Swansea story by signing up to our newsletter here
After completing a three-year training programme in 1977, she received royal endorsement when she received her qualification from the then Prince Charles
Anita said: “I was just 18 when I started my training, and when I completed that I was handed my certificate by Prince Charles. It was quite surreal meeting him.
“As it was a Jubilee year, he presented it at a special ceremony in the Brangwyn Hall. He asked me where I worked and what I did, and I told him I was part of recovery in theatre – it’s where we wake patients up.
“He replied ‘oh and how do you do that? With a kiss?’ which was quite funny.”
The 70-year-old works as a scrub practitioner, supporting surgeons during operations by preparing surgical equipment, passing instruments and upholding rigorous sterile protocols to safeguard patient wellbeing. Anita has discovered tremendous fulfilment and pride in her position, which she maintains to this day.
Over her 52 years with the NHS she has witnessed the advancement of computers and digital technology, the emergence of the internet, medical innovations from early surgical methods to minimally invasive procedures and robotics, and being part of the remarkable resilience shown by healthcare workers throughout the Covid pandemic.
Despite all the transformations throughout her remarkable career in healthcare, one element has stayed unchanged.
Anita, who now works 20 hours a week, added: “The reason I have continued to work here is my dedication to patients and working alongside colleagues who I consider life-long friends.
“Working in a hospital environment is a pressurised setting, but we all work well together and keep our morale up as best as we can.
“For me, the best thing about my job is caring for people. That means a lot to me. I’m regularly told that I am a very unique character who always puts others first including my family and colleagues. That’s down to my mother, who was my biggest role model – she brought me and my family up to be caring and appreciative of family, love and life.”
She continued: “Fifty two years is obviously a very long time to work in the same place – I guess it’s pretty rare these days – but from the day I started I did see myself working a long time here.
“I’m thankful that I still provide care to others and I have a family with an excellent work ethic – my two grand-daughters work within the health board while one of my daughters is manager of a nursing home. So providing care is at the heart of the family.”
Jonathan Gates, Head of Nursing Surgery, said: “Through every decade of change, challenge and progress Anita has been a constant.
“For over 50 years, she has shown unwavering commitment, professionalism and compassion – supporting patients, colleagues and the wider theatre team with quiet dedication and expertise.
“To turn 70 still at work, doing what she has done for over half a century, is nothing short of remarkable. It speaks volumes about her character, work ethic and passion for care.
“Anita’s contribution cannot be measured simply in years – it is measured in the countless patients she’s helped, the colleagues she’s supported and the standards she’s upheld every single day.
“Anita is not just a colleague, she is part of the fabric of Morriston Theatres.”


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