Friday, April 8, 2016

Queenmother Partners Quik Medical Consult to Screens 100s in Awate

Hundreds of indigenes of Awate in the North Dayi district of the Volta Region received a great benevolence from their Queen Mother, Mama Bisa I to undergo series of Health Screening exercise led by a team of health professionals from Quik Medical Consult.

The event which took place on Good Friday on the premises of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in the community saw the patronage of Elders, Parents and their Children who also had the opportunity to receive free health counseling, education and medication.

Talking to Mama Bisa I; who was also commemorating her 10 years anniversary as Queen Mother of the Awate, she explained her action was just intended to educate her people on their health matters and help them get remedies.

Over the years, she has used her influence to organize annual football competitions among the youths on Easter Mondays in her pursuit to promote peace in the community which has subsequently helped resolved disputes in the town and its environs.

She is also leading the establishment of a Vocational Institute which would be used as a facility to train various Junior High School graduates to acquire unique skills in various professions to aid the development of the town.

Benson Owusu, CEO of the Quik Medical Consult led the education on hypertension and diabetes as well as its prevention methods as these diseases were noted to be silent killers among the indigenes.
He further encouraged his fellow health workers to reach out to the society with health education in ensuring the queues at the OPDs reduce after the masses are educated on various preventable diseases killing people in the country and Africa

The Quik Medical Consult has also over the years enrolled Children onto the National Health Insurance Scheme across the country, sponsored surgeries for children, screened thousands and have reached out to millions through various media engagements.

For more information on engaging the Quik Medical Consult, they can be contacted on 0247586344, quikmedicalconsult@gmail.com and www.quikmedicalconsult.com


Source: Prince Akpah

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Ghanaian Footballer Shadrach Eghan Donates To Support Hole in Heart Patient

Ghanaian international, Shadrach Eghan has donated to cover the full medical bills of an 18-month old child suffering from hole-in-heart and expected to undergo urgent surgery at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital. Young Ernest Opuni was diagnosed with the condition after birth.

Shadrach Eghan, 21, who plays for Dutch side FC Twente made a cash donation of $8,000 to support the patient’s treatment through Quik Medical Consult’s “Bail Out A Child project”.

Presenting the amount to the Cardiothoracic Centre of the Hospital on Wednesday, February 3, President of Quik Medical Consult (QMC), Mr. Benson Owusu Atuahene said the presentation out of QMC’s commitment to raise funds to support children whose parents do have the financial capacity to undergo surgeries, pay medical bills and enroll them onto the National Health insurance Scheme.

Director of the National Cardiothoracic Centre, Dr. Lawrence Sereboe who received the donation assured Quik Medical Consult and the family of little Opuni of a successful surgery to correct the defect. He added that persons who had undergone surgery for hole-in-heart can fully recover and live a normal healthy life again without complications.

Quik Medical Consult is a non-governmental organization made up of young Ghanaian medical practitioners from various hospitals in Ghana. It has over the years organized free health screening and health education for various rural communities in Ghana in the country. Persons who wish to donate to Quik Medical Consult’s Bail Out A Child project” can contact (+233)247586344 or (+233)207544828.

Friday, October 30, 2015

Africa Rising: Meet Benson Owusu, Ghana's Leading Nurse and Social Entrepreneur

For some reasons, this young man was inspired to create a team of young health professionals and called themselves the Quick Medical Consult as an organisation.
My first encounter was when he invited me for a trip on one of the team’s outreach to a rural area in the Capital of Ghana, Accra.After hours of driving and fun we arrived in Obom, a community that is denied lots of social amenities and has a clinic that serves so many communities around with only one stethoscope shared throughout the wards.
This has inspired him to reach out to various communities across Ghana, to help them with their medical needs. Free Medical Screenings/Consultations, Free Medical Talks on Radio, TV and Gatherings, Free Registration onto National Health Insurance Scheme, Free Distribution of Clothes and Volunteering through the Vodafone Healthline program have become his passions.
The professional PR and Nurse now turned Social Entrepreneur is contributing to the global Rise of Africa.
Meet Benson…

Did You Know That Prolong Use Of Earphones Can Cause Damage To Your Ear?



Earphones Experts believe that listening to loud music and prolonged earphone use can cause considerable damage to your ears. In addition, it can also cause ear canal infection, another condition that may contribute to hearing loss. Considering these things, should you start thinking about ditching your earphones? Well, not exactly but reduce its use!


 HOW LOUD MUSIC CAN DAMAGE YOUR EAR

Exposing yourself to very loud music (more than 110 decibels) for one minute can considerably increase your risk of experiencing permanent hearing loss. You can also expect the same result by listening to loud music (about 100 decibels) for 15 minutes or by using your earphones for prolonged periods of time, even if the volume merely reaches 85 decibels or about the sound of a lawn mower.

SO, WHY DOES THIS HAPPEN?

According to a study conducted at the University of Leicester, loud noises can strip away the myelin sheath of the nerve cells. Since the myelin sheath is responsible for facilitating the transmission of sound impulses from the ears to the brain, any damage that it sustains can lead to temporary deafness.
In addition, a study published in the Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences in July 2002 showed that prolonged earphone use can cause aural hygiene problems and ear canal infection. The study also went on to suggest that wearing earphones for prolonged periods of time can increase the temperature and humidity inside the ear canal, thereby increasing a person's susceptibility to ear canal infection.
Exposure to noise pollution, especially for younger people, has gone from huge boom boxes and car stereo speakers to sound delivered directly into the ear through headphones or earphones.
Headphones and earphones appear to be the most damaging. Since noise-induced hearing loss is a result of intensity (loudness) and duration of exposure, these devices may be capable of inducing a permanent bilateral sensorineural hearing loss — especially if they are used at a volume setting of four or above for extended periods.

Hearing specialist David A. Schessel, MD, PhD, chief of our Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Division, tells parents: "If you can hear the music your child/teenager is playing through their headphones or earphones, it means the sound is too loud and can lead to permanent hearing loss."
The amount of hearing loss that one will suffer is related both to the volume, measured in decibels (dB), and the duration of time that one is exposed to the sound.
Sound at 85 dB or below is considered safe. Think about it!
If one is exposed to sounds greater than 90 dB for an average of eight hours per day without hearing protection, hearing loss will most likely result. As the volume increases, the safe time of exposure decreases.
Here are some loudness/time facts to consider (the unit of measurement is decibel):

    At 95 dB, damage will occur after four hours of exposure per day.
    At 100 dB, damage will occur after two hours of exposure per day.
    At 105 dB, damage will occur after one hour of exposure per day.
    At 110 dB, damage will occur after 30 minutes of exposure per day.
    At 115 dB, damage will occur after 15 minutes of exposure per day.
    At 120-plus dB, damage occurs almost immediately.

Most portable stereo music systems produce sound in the range of 95-108 dB at level four and in excess of 115 dB at level eight.

For comparison, a soft whisper is usually measured at 30dB; busy traffic at 75dB; a subway train at 90dB; a gunshot blast at 100 dB, a jet plane at 140 dB; and a rocket launching pad at 180 dB. Sounds above 140 dB usually cause pain. If you have to speak in a loud voice to be understood, background sound is probably in excess of 90 dB

PROTECTING YOUR EARS AGAINST HEARING LOSS
To prevent such problems, you need to follow the 60:60 Rule when using your personal music player. You need to set your player's volume at 60% of the maximum volume and make sure you don't use it for more than 60 minutes at a time. Use earplugs or ear protectors when you are exposed to loud noises and use premium earphones

This article was researched on by;
Mattearphones
Dr. David A. Schessel, MD, PhD

Saturday, October 10, 2015

THE ART AND SCIENCE OF SPIRITUAL CARE

By Owusu Benson
Spiritual care is care that recognises and responds to the needs of the human spirit when faced with trauma, ill health or sadness. It can include the need for meaning, for self-worth, to express oneself, for faith support, perhaps for rites or prayer or sacrament, or simply for a sensitive listener. ‘Spiritual care begins with encouraging human contact in compassionate relationships, and moves in whatever direction needs require’ (NHS Education for Scotland, 2009).
My name is Owusu Benson, a registered general nurse at the Princess Marie Louise Hospital, Accra Ghana and the President of the Quik Medical Consult, a group made up of health professionals with the aim of reaching out to the world through health education. For years now, it look as if spiritual care in the course of treating patient’s that comes to the health facility has gone into extinction hence the urgent need to make it part of our practice because it may be the only therapy the patient may need to recover from his or her ailment.
Ghana is a country located in the western part of Africa with a population of approximately twenty five million, it has a very rich culture and is composed of three main religious groups; Christians, Muslim and traditional religions.
According to the 2010 population census 61.2% of Ghanaians are Christians, 32.5% Islamic and 3.3% traditionalist. All these religions believe in the supreme God but worship him through different means. I must emphasise that Ghanaians and for that matter Africans as a whole are very religious and believe that whatever happens to them has a spiritual basis and they also believe that the supernatural has a role in their healing process. In a predominantly Christian country it is not uncommon for Christian nurses’ or doctors to assume that patients under their care are Christians. A further major problem I identified was that the spiritual aspects of nursing /medical care have long been neglected, although most patients seem to draw strength from their belief when they are ill. Patients who seek spiritual care from their deity during admission are often seen as the ‘difficult ones’.
Delving into the issue of spiritual care, I must emphasize that, spirituality is not:
·         Allabout imposing your beliefs and practices. If you are a Christian nurse or doctor you don’t have to force what you have been taught at church on your patients’ who for example are Muslims. A typical example is asking the patient who is a traditionalist under your care to say the ‘Lord’s Prayer’
·         Spiritual care is not an opportunity to use your position to try to convert the patient from one religion to the other.
·         Spiritual care is not a specialist activity. This means that you don’t have to attain a doctorate in spiritual care to provide it. By understanding the faith of the patient you can meet or assist in meeting the deepest needs
·         It is not the sole responsibility of the chaplain but a collaborative effortof all, staff, family and friends

What then constitute spiritual care?
Spiritual care is all about:
·         Hope and strength – when a patient is sick, they put all their hope in their object of worship believing that they can draw strength and get divine healing from it
·         Forgiveness – I cared for a patient who always said she was going through her ailment because she committed adultery. She was thus always depressed. It seemed none of the treatment regimen was working for this woman until she narrated the incident to me.
Because she was a Christian it made it easier for me to share the scripture on what says about forgiveness. Within a week, we noticed improvement in her health status and she was discharged the following week. When she was convinced that God had forgiven her upon confession, she had peace in herself and this brought back a smile on her face. This is an example of true spiritual care when providing true spiritual care it is important to have a belief in oneself and in others. Recognising that for some, a belief in a deity, certain values, love and relationships, morality, creativity and self-expression are all an integral part of their spirituality. The nurse or doctor caring for the patient onadmission must observe and identify clues as to whether the patient has an underlying spiritual need. Examples of such clues are distressed patients, patients who are sad or tormented and those who constantly ask spiritual questions.
                Should health workers take into consideration the spiritual needs of patients and address it as such, it can reduce their stay on admission.

Reference

-Royal college of nursing handbook on spiritual care