🏆 Referee announced for 2026 #SuperCup!
We're pleased to share that Somali referee Omar Artan will officiate the highly anticipated match between PSG and Aston Villa in Salzburg.
Rotator cuff repair doesn't have to be a one-size-fits-all approach.
This new review covers the latest augmentation strategies to improve repair integrity and long-term outcomes. https://t.co/C8gHw2yAed
✅ Valencia
✅ Getafe
✅ Real Sociedad
✅ Girona
✅ Elche
✅ Athletic Club
✅ Alavés
✅ Osasuna
✅ Atlético de Madrid
✅ Oviedo
✅ Mallorca
✅ Levante
✅ Villarreal
✅ Sevilla
✅ Rayo Vallecano
✅ Espanyol
✅ Celta de Vigo
✅ Real Madrid
✅ Betis
🏟️ 19/19 at home 🤯
All the stats from behind the record 👇🏻
https://t.co/lKkiaz9f94
Here is a new case by Dr. Atul Kamath and Kamath Orthopedics.
KNEE PAIN IN 69M
This case will be discussed at Sharpening Your Edge in Las Vegas, Nevada, June 26-27, 2026: https://t.co/a7IIuVoDni
How would you manage this #orthotwitter?
Vote on this case for CME: https://t.co/hVWhwjROT3
A recent survey of 376 healthcare professionals revealed that 63% DID NOT understand the concept of a p-value.
Do you think you can pass the P-value explanation test❓
Are you part of the 63%?
Let's break it down in simpler terms…
Family of 13-year-old Jeffery Adjei Boakye is seeking urgent public support to raise $40,000 for a life-saving kidney transplant in India.
The Grade 7 pupil, currently receiving treatment at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital for end-stage kidney disease, has been described by doctors as being in critical condition.
Donations can be sent to: 0594140412
Name: Janet Kumi
#GHOneNews #EIBNetwork
#GHOneTV #NewsAlert
Family of 13-year-old Jeffery Adjei Boakye is appealing to the public for urgent support to raise $40,000 for a life-saving kidney transplant in India.
Jeffery, a Grade 7 pupil at Zion Praise Educational Complex in Maduma, Ashanti Region, is currently receiving treatment at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital after being diagnosed with end-stage kidney disease.
Medical specialists at the facility have described his condition as critical, stressing the need for an immediate renal transplant to improve his chances of survival.
Donations can be sent to: 0594140412
Name: Janet Kumi
#GHOneNews #EIBNetwork
#GHOneTV #NewsAlert
🏆 𝐌𝐮𝐧𝐝𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐋𝐚𝐋𝐢𝐠𝐚 𝐅𝐮𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞𝐬
🗒️ Quarts de final
👍🏼 Barça 2️⃣-1️⃣ Real Madrid
⚽️ Pedro Juárez i Joel Cabanes
🥳 Remuntada en el MiniClàssic i classificació per a les semifinals! Ben jugat, nois!!!
📷 @LaLiga#FCBMasia 💙❤️
The kidney crisis in Ghana may be far worse than most people realize. So why is this happening❓
The real problem is that kidney disease usually develops quietly.
Many people do not know they have it until the damage is already advanced.
The main explanation is that, the major drivers of kidney diseases are rising fast and often poorly controlled:
➤ Hypertension
➤ Diabetes
➤ Obesity
➤ Poor diet
➤ Low physical activity
➤ Late diagnosis
————————-
Recent data from Ghana show that:
✓ About 1 in 5 (21.7%) of adults have hypertension
✓ More than half of those with high blood pressure had not been previously diagnosed
✓ Only a small fraction were treated and controlled
✓ 34.3% of adults were overweight or obese
This is how kidney disease builds at population level.
Slowly.
Quietly.
Then all at once in the clinic, in dialysis units, and in grieving families.
The kidney does not fail in one day.
It fails after years of pressure, sugar, salt, missed checkups, and delayed care.
———-
What makes this even more serious is that chronic kidney disease raises the risk of:
• Heart disease
• Stroke
• Anemia
• Fluid overload
• Premature death
———-
So what should people do now?
Know your numbers:
➤ Blood pressure
➤ Blood sugar
➤ kidney function
Protect your kidneys by:
✓ Controlling blood pressure
✓ Controlling diabetes early
✓ Reducing excess salt
✓ Staying active
✓ Maintaining a healthy weight
✓ Avoiding unnecessary use of painkillers, herbal mixtures, and other substances that may harm the kidneys
✓Getting checked early if you have hypertension, diabetes, or a family history of kidney disease
We need to stop treating kidney disease as a rare specialist issue.
It is now a mainstream public health issue.
If we wait until kidney failure, we have already waited too long.
I’ll be streaming live from the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
See the tournament through my POV Kaly’s Eyes. Tribe and I are cooking up a World Cup experience you won’t forget.
Brand slots are open.
And if you know my live streams… you already know what’s coming.🇺🇸🇨🇦🇲🇽
Motion Year 💚
Alhamdulillah. On behalf of Ramadan Outreach, We are truly grateful.
Jazakum Allahu khair to everyone who donated towards the Widows Ease Initiative. Through your generosity, 38 widows were able to receive food items and a cash token this Ramadan. Your support truly made a meaningful difference and brought ease to many homes.
Allah says: “Whatever you spend in charity, He will replace it.” (Qur’an 34:39)
May Allah accept your charity, multiply your rewards, and bless you abundantly. Ameen. 🤍
Silent killers with no early symptoms
HIV → AIDS
High BP → stroke
Chlamydia → infertility
HPV → cervical cancer
Hepatitis B → liver cancer
Hepatitis C → liver cirrhosis
Diabetes → kidney failure
High LDL cholesterol → heart attack
Repost to raise awareness.
Scholarship letters like these reflect the outcome of the work that was put into creating a standout application
Emory University Rollins School of Public Health hardly gives this amount of scholarship. So this offer means something
→ Academic excellence
→ Leadership
→ Service
not accidental.
That’s positioning.
⸻
Scholarships are about
└► Clear direction
└► Demonstrated leadership
└► Evidence of impact
└► Institutional fit
When those four align, funding follows.
⸻
This cycle alone, we’ve seen multiple top-tier offers.
Because we don’t submit “hopeful” applications.
We submit strategic ones.
⸻
To my mentee in Ghana 🇬🇭:
You earned this.
Congratulations!
Imagine you are in a serious road traffic crash in Accra tonight.
Or imagine a friend/relative suddenly collapses at home from cardiac arrest.
In that moment, nobody is thinking about politics.
Your family is asking one question:
Can Ghana’s emergency system keep you alive long enough to reach definitive care?
That is the only question that matters.
⸻
Now ask the harder question:
What are your chances of surviving a time-critical emergency in a system where we’ve normalized the phrase “No Bed Syndrome”?
That phrase sounds like a hospital crowding problem.
It’s not.
“No Bed Syndrome” is a symptom of a poorly functioning emergency care system.
The bed is just the final explanation the public hears.
The failure often starts much earlier.
⸻
The World Health Organization is clear on this:
Emergency care is not a ward or bed.
It is a system, from:
→ The scene
→ To transport
→ To the facility
→ Too early inpatient care
Survival depends on the full chain, not just what happens at a hospital entrance.
So Ghana must stop discussing “No Bed Syndrome” as if it’s only a space problem.
It is the public name for an emergency system failure.
⸻
After every tragedy, we repeat the same cycle:
People blame one doctor.
One nurse.
One hospital.
The debate becomes emotional.
Then the country moves on.
That cycle is exactly why the problem persists.
Yes, individual accountability matters.
Yes, professional ethics matter.
Yes, hospital leadership matters.
But when multiple facilities fail one patient in sequence, the problem is no longer only individual.
It is structural.
Because:
A doctor cannot create a referral network during a crisis.
A nurse cannot produce an ambulance without fuel.
A hospital cannot function as a national emergency system on its own.
If we keep asking frontline staff to compensate for weak coordination, weak transport, weak communication, and weak operational rules…
…then Ghana will keep producing the same headlines.
⸻
A functioning emergency system requires:
→ Trained personnel
→ Vehicles and dispatch
→ Equipment and essential supplies
→ Communication and information systems
→ Clinical + operational protocols
→ Accountability that is measurable, not rhetorical
Public anger is valid because the public understands something policy debates often avoid:
A person in an emergency should not have to negotiate the health system while dying.
That is the real meaning of “No Bed Syndrome.”
It is not a phrase about beds.
It is a warning that Ghana has allowed emergency care to operate without the coordination, readiness, standards, and accountability required to save lives reliably.
⸻
If Ghana wants to prove that human life is truly a national priority,
This is where the proof must begin.
The Ghana Medical Trust Fund ( Mahama Cares) is up and running.
Beyond providing assistance to sufferers of non-communicable diseases to meet the prohibitive cost of treatment, they are also investing in critical infrastructure for such treatment.
A prime example is the on-going construction of state-of-the-art cardiology centres in three teaching hospitals:
Korle Bu Teaching Hospital
Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital
Tamale Teaching Hospital
These centres will be fully equipped with:
Modern catheterization laboratories
Operating theatres
Intensive Care Units
Consulting rooms
Pharmacies
Dedicated oxygen plants.
The design of the Centres is shown in the first picture. The rest show progress made so far.