Tag: Patient

  • FULL TEXT: Trauma and Specialist Hospital’s report on patient left in bush for dead

    FULL TEXT: Trauma and Specialist Hospital’s report on patient left in bush for dead

    The Trauma and Specialist Hospital in Winneba has filed a detailed incident report concerning a woman allegedly abandoned by the government hospital, leading to her death due to administrative issues.

    The woman, involved in an accident, was reportedly left in a bush because her family could not be located, resulting in her passing away after three days.

    Responding to this, Dr. Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, has temporarily relieved the facility’s Director of duties.

    Additionally, a five-member committee has been set up to investigate the circumstances surrounding the abandonment of a patient in Gomoa Ojobi.

    The report was submitted and signed by Dr. Prah George Kwame.

    See the full report below:

    REPORT ON AN INCIDENT INVOLVING UNKNOWN PERSON BROUGHT TO TRAUMA AND SPECIALIST HOSPITAL ON THE 29. MAY, 2024

    On the above-mentioned date, the National Ambulance Service called the Social Welfare Officer of the hospital to inquire as to whether the hospital was ready to accept an unknown knocked down person by a ‘hit and ran’ driver and the response was in the affirmative.

    The victim of the accident was brought to the hospital by the National Ambulance Service accompanied by the Social Welfare Officer of Gomoa Ojobi and treatment process started in earnest on the same day.

    After the necessary examinations were done, Plaster of Paris (POP) was cast on both lower limbs of the patient due to fracture of the tibia bones. The hospital as usual took absolute responsibility for feeding, medication and housekeeping of the patient. The patient had been on admission for six (6) days and finally discharged on the 3’d June, 2024 after being declared well. The medical record is tendered in as evidence.

    Meanwhile, based on the outcome of the interaction between the Social Welfare Officer and the patient, it was established that the patient hailed from Gomoa Ojobi community and that also confirmed where the National Ambulance picked her up.

    At certain point in time during the treatment process the patient became dis oriented and started to exhibit some amount of violence. However, after gaining some strength and consciousness, the patient was calm and wished to have been sent back to where she was picked up.

    Moreover, after the patient was declared well by the Clinician, coupled with the fact that she was itching to leave the hospital, a consensus was reached by the two social welfare officers to send her back to Gomoa Ojobi as agreed by the two social workers.

    At this juncture, the hospital Ambulance accompanied by the social welfare officer and a staff of the hospital were detailed to transport her accordingly to the preferred destination of her choice after clothing her nicely and made available to her a wheel chair.

    Again, before the departure from the hospital to Ojobi, the Social Welfare Officer interacted with his counterpart at Ojobi to inform her that the patient was being brought back to Ojobi and she assured to take over.

    Sincerely speaking, if one should objectively analyse the situation at hand, one would realize that the hospital had played its role as expected of it by taking care of the patient, empathize with her but unfortunately the inevitable occurred.

    It would interest the public to know that Trauma and Specialist Hospital, Winneba is being operated by well-trained health professionals and will not for a moment misconduct themselves to dent the corporate image of the Ghana Health Service and its own image as a secondary referral facility.

    Furthermore, mention should be made clearly that this had not been the first time this hospital had played “Good Samaritan “role by taking care of patients of such calibre and delivering them back safely to their community after getting well. Records are available to authenticate the veracity of this claim.

    Management would like to appreciate the sentiments expressed by the public regarding this unfortunate incidence. This is a learning curve and a bitter lesson to learn, and promised not to repeat it again in the life history of the hospital.

    SIGNED

    Dr. Prah George Kwame (PhD)

    Medical Director

  • Guinness World Records: Patient with longest survival after heart transplantation

    Guinness World Records: Patient with longest survival after heart transplantation

    The person who has lived the longest after getting a new heart has been given an award by Guinness World Records.

    Bert Janssen, who is 57 years old and from the Netherlands, has been living for almost 40 years with the heart he got from a donor at Harefield Hospital in Uxbridge, north-west London, in the 1980s.

    He was being treated for a heart condition that makes it hard for the heart to pump blood.

    He said he was “very thankful for the amazing gift” his donor gave him.

    Mr Janssen found out he had heart muscle disease after he got sick with symptoms like the flu at 17.

    His heart doctor in his country knew the doctors at Harefield Hospital and the person who started doing heart transplants, Prof Sir Magdi Yacoub. Prof Sir Magdi Yacoub did the surgery on 6 June 1984.

    The operation didn’t happen in the Netherlands yet. Mr Janssen, who was 18 when he had the operation, said: “It all happened very quickly. Just one week after coming to Harefield, two hearts became available from a big car crash in London.

    “I had surgery where they replaced my heart with someone else’s. ”

    Mr Janssen said that he was able to go back to feeling good after the surgery.

    The man is happy to have broken the record for air gliding. He is also a husband and has two children. He feels proud.

    “He said he never thought he would come this far. ”

    I believe the most important thing is to be a good example for others to follow. It has been proven that it is possible to go this far with a donated heart.

    “I think the marker will continue to move even more, and I will be happy if someone else breaks my record eventually. ”

    He was the 107th person to have a transplant at Harefield Hospital.

    Sir Magdi performed the first transplant in 1980, and the center has done thousands more since then. In 2022-23, 54 transplants were completed.

    Dr Fernando Riesgo Gil, a heart specialist at Harefield Hospital, said he is happy to hear that one of their first heart transplant patients is still living a good and happy life many years after the transplant.

    Last week, there were 7,314 adults and 248 kids waiting for a transplant in the UK. This information is from the NHS Blood and Transplant website.

    Out of all of them, 334 people are waiting for hearts.

  • How Gregory Rockson is enhancing health services in Africa

    How Gregory Rockson is enhancing health services in Africa

    A world where a mother has to choose between medications for her health or education for her child is an unjust world.” This quote on Gregory’s LinkedIn page is an insight into the mission of mPharma, an innovative technology-driven health inventory and retail pharmacy company operating in nine countries; Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Zambia, Gabon, Rwanda, Malawi, and Uganda.

    The company is building a community of pharmacies across Africa to provide easier and better quality healthcare service to the millions of people on the continent.

    Gregory Rockson is the co-founder and CEO of mPharma, its inventory management system is used in over 850 pharmacy stores in Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Zambia, Gabon, Rwanda, Malawi, and Uganda.

    The company is working to improve access and affordability of high-quality drugs for patients across Africa. It has 155 hospital partners, 850 pharmacies and drug stores, and over 2 million patients. Its intervention in the healthcare industry has helped over 400,000 patients purchase high-quality medicine at a cheaper cost.

    mPharma was founded in 2013 by Gregory Rockson, Daniel Shoukimas, and James Finucorie as a pharmacy offering high-quality medical and pharmaceutical supplies in Ghana. Within a few years, the healthcare business has expanded to nine African countries, with its headquarters in Ghana, and is building a scalable drug inventory management using the Airbnb model to enable vendor-managed inventory for healthcare providers in Africa.

    Gregory and his co-founders are focused on building an Africa with good health by developing a tech system for medical practitioners and medical offices to leverage in solving challenges in the provision of good healthcare. mPharma’s objective is to connect patients, hospitals, and pharmacies; to enable doctors, hospitals, and patients to know the exact location and availability of medicines for better access.

    By increasing patients’ access to drugs at reduced costs while sustaining quality, mPharma is continually improving health interventions, bridging gaps in healthcare provision, and bringing vital services closer to communities through online and offline channels.

    The company launched ‘bloom,’ a flagship software product defined as the operating software for the modern African pharmacy. It extends beyond most hospital software used in easing workflows and capturing data, as well as tablets or computing. It is directly tied to mPharma’s core value proposition of vendor-managed, data-driven, diverse management, data management, and e-commerce services; and is an interface that enables pharmacies to connect to mPharma and offer value to their patients.

    In recent months, mPharma is strategically diversifying its assets and expanded operations with the acquisition of a 55% stake in Vine Pharmacy in Uganda, and a franchise agreement with Belayab Pharmaceuticals in Ethiopia. It acquired Halton’s pharmacy in Kenya and a majority stake in Nigeria’s HealthPlus.

    In July 2022, mPharma launched ‘Facility Insight,’ an optimized customer-centric product designed to aid clinical decision-making. The easy-to-use online platform generates real-time accurate data 24/7, including sales, profits, product reports, and other insights. The new system provides information to aid well-informed decision-making for pharmacy management.

    Gregory Rockson is a Ghanaian who holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Political Science and Government from both Westminster College and the University of Copenhagen. He studied Policy and International Affairs at Princeton University and holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Biological Sciences from the University of Ghana.

    Aside from mPharma, he is the Executive Chairman of ‘Vine Pharmaceuticals,’ and also the Executive Chairman of Holtons Limited, and was named one of the 100 Most Influential Africans in 2020 and 2022 by the New African Magazine.