This moment. Feels surreal.
Indeed Allah is the best of planners.
We finally have an endometriosis expert visiting and consulting in Maldives at @igmhmv in a week.
Alhamdulillah 🤲
So I come to the King Salman mosque with my kids a lot of evenings to have some relaxing time outside. Today as I’m sitting here, my kids eating some kinderjoy, a staff came and told me “excuse, mithaanga keumakee manaa kameh. Beyruga kaigen ayas okay”.
So IGMH is sending the same gyno team to Kulhudhuffushi for a specialty they apparently believe can be “treated” by general drs.
I mean, why not just have a general surgeon run a cardio clinic too?
Also, do they really know the actual condition of the patients “treated” here?
Just because medical professionals in the Maldives don’t have an interest in dedicating their service to endometriosis doesn’t mean patients should be denied proper care. Women deserve access to accurate information, specialist treatment, and doctors who take their pain seriously
I may not have studied journalism, but isn’t it the journalist’s responsibility to do at least some basic research before reporting anything? Quoting unverified claims without even minimal fact-checking turns journalism into hearsay.
@Dhaurunews
Contradicting statement’s. One says specialists don’t exist, the other says they spent MVR 1M in welfare aid. Why waste that on a condition you don’t believe needs specialized care? Why “try” Aasandha from a multidisciplinary hospital if your doctors think any gyno can handle it?
And this is exactly why Maldives will never truly improve its healthcare system.
When the main hospital of the Republic of Maldives refuses to acknowledge that #endometriosis excision specialists are real surgeons despite a global shortage of them
🧵 1/6
Dharimaivumuge faruva aa gulhey thamreenu scholarship thakeh dhivehi doctorun ah dhenee https://t.co/HmQLXxiqPo
Need such scholarships to train doctors in endometriosis