Madam, yɛda mo ase for the efforts, but honestly, the flooding situation is becoming too much. We need practical solutions and urgent interventions, not only assurances. Lives and properties are at stake. We should be seeing some results by now.
Ɔman bɛn kra nie. 🇬🇭💔
My team and I which includes NADMO & all MMDCEs are working tirelessly to reduce flood and its impact. We’re trying, engineering works are ongoing and I’m very certain you’ve seen me several times trying to restore Ramsar sites & pull down buildings blocking water ways. Thanks.
Let’s be objective here: pointing out that DNA tests aren't infallible isn't a 'social media opinion', it is a scientific reality. Chain of custody errors, sample contamination, and human error in local labs happen and can ruin lives. Furthermore, he regularly advises his audience to visit hospitals; he cannot control what desperate people choose to type in his comment section. Blaming a content creator for the systemic failures of our healthcare system, where people avoid hospitals due to cost or poor treatment, is entirely missing the point.
Public health has always relied on peer educators and community advocates, not just doctors in white coats. Francis is using modern tools to do what community health nurses have done for decades. Suggesting the Ministry of Health 'invite' him as a threat is counterproductive. Instead, the MoH should collaborate with creators like him who actually have the public's ear to push out verified health campaigns. Discredit the specific points if you have superior data, but don't discredit the vital role of public health education.
Information being on Google doesn't mean people understand it. Francis translates complex health topics into relatable terms for ordinary people. He isn't replacing hospitals; he's raising awareness in a country with low health literacy. Let’s support the education instead of attacking the educator.
You spoke a whole lot of rubbish and your gullible followers will think you’ve made sense. I blame myself for expecting you to be intellectually apt but I was kidding myself. Continue with your ignorance
I have seen videos of a guy called Yeboah Agyekum Francis on TikTok teaching health-related topics. Recently, he has been complaining that people are threatening him and facing all sorts of attacks.
But honestly, some of the things he teaches do not make sense to me. Most of the information he shares can easily be found through a simple Google search or AI tools. Yet people are in the comments praising him as if he is revealing hidden secrets.
What worries me most is that some Ghanaians are taking his words as medical facts. I even heard him claiming that DNA tests are not always legitimate. These are serious topics that require scientific evidence, not social media opinions.
Instead of visiting hospitals and consulting qualified health professionals, many people are under his comments asking for medical help and advice. That is dangerous.
Ghanaians need to do more research, verify information, and stop treating every TikTok health influencer as an authority. The Ministry of Health should invite him to explain some of these claims because misinformation about health can have real consequences.
Credit: Bongo Ideas on Facebook
Bongo ideas on facebook 📱;
Bongo Ideas has raised concerns over some of the health-related claims made by TikTok influencer Yeboah Agyekum Francis, warning against treating social media advice as medical fact and urging Ghanaians to verify information with qualified health professionals.
Is bongo hating or speaking facts??
In 2020, while I worked as a MoMo attendant in Kintampo, he was my regular customer. We became close, and he shared insights about his business. Unfortunately, I missed the opportunity to learn from him, a regret I still have today. He is truly a top guy!