One Initiative, Four Teams; One Goal: To strengthen the healthcare system in Nigeria by ensuring access to quality, safe, essential and standard health services
The Lenacapavir injection that prevents HIV is finally in Nigeria. This is a massive win for HIV prevention.
But Emeka and Nkechi, here are a few things you should know before you get it:
1. It does not prevent pregnancy, Syphilis, Gonorrhea, or Hepatitis B. So while you’re protected from HIV, you’re not immune to other STIs. You still need to use your condom abeg.
2. You MUST test negative for HIV before taking it. If you take it while secretly infected, the virus can mutate and become highly resistant to future treatments.
3. It is strictly for PREVENTION (PrEP), it is not a cure for HIV.
4. The ₦58,000 price is a subsidized target. Please, do not go and buy fake from a random unverified chemist because you saw it’s cheaper.
RT to educate someone today.
Too many women are dying quietly from a disease we can prevent.
For many, access to healthcare is still out of reach, screenings are delayed, warning signs are missed, and cervical cancer continues to take mothers, daughters, sisters, and friends far too soon. We couldn’t solve it all, but we chose to play our part. We set out to host a cervical cancer screening in Abuja for 1,000 women, and by the end, we had screened over 1000.
There’s much more needs to be done. There are still countless people with limited access to care, still more lives that can be protected. We will continue to do all we can to save as many lives as possible, that is THE MISSION.
NEW: Oxford researchers have found that higher temperatures can shift the sex ratio at birth.
Temperatures above 20°C are consistently linked to fewer boys being born across multiple regions - with implications for population health and gender balance.
Read more ⬇️
80% of funding for HIV care and management in Nigeria come from international donors. The medications reach Nigerians for free through the following means which will be the same way Lenacapavir will be much cheaper or free for different people
https://t.co/suA6akr96w
Vaccines and medicines are often victims of their own success. They work so effectively that, over time, people forget the devastation they were designed to prevent and begin to question their necessity.
Introducing,
Pharm. Nicholas O. Familiar (B.Pharm; MPSN)
#Distinction- 4.74/5 (Salutatorian🥈& BGS female🥇)
Distinction in 6/6 departments, BGS in 3 out of the 6 departments.
Glory to God!
Thank you, gee-gees! @DimkpaBenita @OMeyez @Pheel_son @Happogweh
Congratulations my boss🤩🤩🙌, @OMeyez .
Keep shining brighter and brighter - the future is incredibly bright, my brother!
And as you would say, "Great times are upon us," and indeed they are. This milestone marks the beginning of greater, bigger and better things for you.
More pictures from my Induction & Oath-taking ceremony… (Thursday, 8th August, 2024).
Thank you all, for the reposts, quotes, messages and prayers.
It’s from here to the ends of the Earth. 💫🥂😇
#BGS#Award#GOLD
B. Pharm bagged!
Allow me to reintroduce myself as the
Newly inducted Pharmacist Favour Orunchukwu Meye,
Best Graduating Student of the Faculty of Pharmacy with a CGPA of 4.83/5.00 and a recipient of 14 awards!
Glory to God🙏
#Pharmacist#Pharmacy#Awards#BGS#Chidimma
First slide: During my valedictory speech, it was time for the entire class to have their moment 😂
We acknowledged my project supervisor and one of our most friendly lecturers -Dr Peter Owonaro.
Second slide: How to end a Valedictory speech 😇🥂
Here’s what’s next.
Pharm. Ogbeye Philip Olasukanmi
B.Pharm (Distinction; CGPA 4.72/5.00)
Best Graduating Student, Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Pharmacy. (With Parallel A’s)
5.0/5.0 GPA in 3 semesters.
Distinction in 5/6 departments.
B. Pharm bagged!
Allow me to reintroduce myself as the
Newly inducted Pharmacist Favour Orunchukwu Meye,
Best Graduating Student of the Faculty of Pharmacy with a CGPA of 4.83/5.00 and a recipient of 14 awards!
Glory to God🙏
#Pharmacist#Pharmacy#Awards#BGS#Chidimma