For all your claims of taking it up legally, you clearly did not speak to a lawyer before posting this.
You just posted hard evidence that you had sex with someone who was black out drunk and completely unable to consent to the sex.
That is rape.
I don't know who your legal advisor is but you just openly admitted on the Internet to rape, unprotected at that?
A drunk person cannot consent to sex not to talk about a flat out drunk person that you had to keep reminding every 15 minutes of who you are to her.
Exactly just because one egg is rotten, doesn't mean the entire crate rotten
Men have contributed immensely towards gynaecology and women's reproductive health
Saying a particular gender shouldn't be in a certain field is discrimination and quite frankly ignoring their hardwork
I gave birth at Ifako-Ijaiye General Hospital. Did four scans during the pregnancy.The person who spoke to me with genuine warmth and patience? A man.
The one who actually listened carefully, took every single complaint seriously, and checked me properly? Also a man.
After delivery, my daughter was stable, but it was the male doctor who looked at her and said, “She looks fine now, but I suggest we treat for jaundice just to be safe.” We registered her for phototherapy on the third day, and sure enough, her eyes started showing that yellow tint.
No shade to the female doctors; they did their jobs well. But the men on duty during my stay were straight 10/10. Competence, attention, and care delivered without drama.
That’s the reality I experienced.
@gamerwalt Ahh yess, I will send a dm I haven't heard from her in years I started right from Creche in their primary school including my siblings she used to carry me around. I miss her so much
@gamerwalt@eezharhh My goodness, the man in the picture, Papa and his wife, Mama, may God rest his soul
They were the owners of my primary school, Banez International school in Ibadan
@microbialawyer@PapiJruee Why does the area look empty
Why during the entire ordeal no teacher heard or was probably passing by
What made them so comfortable to do such in the school environment
So many unanswered questions
Why it might BE negligence: The family will argue that the nurse should have documented the refusal, alerted a doctor to the patient's agitation, or ensured the patient was supervised if he was a "fall risk."
As a medical practitioner myself I will break down the explanation
The Burden of Duty vs. Patient Autonomy
The nurses certainly had a duty of care to the patient. However, healthcare workers also have to respect patient autonomy (the right of a patient to refuse treatment
MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE?
I had a long call with my friend, a nurse, we discussed at length and he needed my input on a case of alleged medical negligence involving 2 nurses at his work place.
According to him, a committee has been set up by the management to look into the case.
The 2 nurses were attending to over 15 patients at the medical A&E at night, amongst the patients was an elderly man who was oxygen dependent.
The man wanted to use the toilet, the nurses attention were drawn, one of them brought a screen, and gave the man a bed pan to use.
The patient insists that he must be wheeled into the rest room, that he is not a child, that he will be defeating inside a bed pan.
The nurse explained to him that, moving the big oxygen cylinder will be very difficult and pleaded with him but the argument continues and the nurse attention was drawn to another patient.
She left the bed pan with the man and went to attend to the patient, the wife removed the nasal prong and took the husband to the toilet.
While waiting for the husband to come out of the rest room, the nurse came back to ask for the patient, the wife told her that he was in the rest room, "how long"? She asked, well "not too long" she responded.
The nurse went to knock on the door, but no response, she quickly opened the door, and saw the man lying on the floor of the rest room.
The doctor's attention was quickly drawn but unfortunately the man was certified dead. The aggrieved family is threatening to sue the hospital.
What do you think? Is this a case of medical negligence?
Why it might NOT be negligence: The nurse provided the correct equipment, gave a warning, and was distracted by other clinical duties. The "proximate cause" of death was the wife removing the oxygen and the patient's physical exertion against medical advice.
It's not propaganda
No birth experience is the same, just because you had it easy doesn't mean others would, women have died, became blind, paralysed just giving birth and if a damn scientist says giving birth is second then damn yeah it is