Abiola
73 posts


@ABJ_psycho Cowrywise is one of the most effective fintech companies out there
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Abiola retweetet

IF A HEAVILY PREGNANT WOMAN COLLAPSES IN FRONT OF YOU.
DON'T BE SCARED, BE BRAVE.
SHARE TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW
There is a particular hush that enters a room when a pregnant woman collapses, a hush that feels like fear holding its breath, and like hope waiting to be summoned. And as a gynae doctor, I have learned that in those quiet, trembling seconds, what you do and what you refuse to fear can save not one life, but two.
And so, let us speak plainly, and yet tenderly, about what must happen.
1. First, do not panic.
Because panic is a thief. it steals clarity, and it steals time. Breathe. Steady yourself. You cannot rescue another while drowning in your own fright.
2. Check if she is present.
Tap her shoulders. Call her name the way you would call someone back from a drifting edge. Is she breathing? Is her pulse humming softly under the skin of her neck?
These answers guide your next breath, and your next move.
3. Tilt her belly, slightly, purposefully to the left. Because the womb, in all its beauty and weight, can press against the great vessels at her back, and because shifting it gently to the left frees her heart to receive blood again.
It is a small movement, yet it is also a quiet miracle.
4. And if she is not breathing, start CPR. Immediately.
Place your hands in the centre of her chest, just below and between her breasts, and push. Push as though life itself is calling through your palms. Push hard. Push fast.
Give breaths if you can.
Call 911, or your emergency number, because skilled hands are on their way but your hands are the first responders her body is waiting for.
5. Remember the unforgiving truth of time. In pregnancy, you have 4 to 5 minutes, not stories, not speculation, not hesitation, just minutes.
Minutes that can make the difference between a life restored and a life remembered.
And let me say this with the gentle firmness of a doctor who has seen too many preventable tragedies: For all the campaigns, and the jingles, and the well-funded PR… it will be a quiet tragedy if you still do not learn CPR.
Learn it. Practice it. Carry it like a form of love. Because one day, and may that day never come, and yet may you be ready, it might be your hands that hold the thin thread between life and loss.
Share this. Spread it.
And perhaps… save someone.

Dr. Ose Etiobhio@osemagnum
If she was a pregnant woman and she collapsed... guys, what would you do? Are you running away?... "make she no put me for trouble"
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I didnt know that Ezra post of "you and me" will blow. Don't be angry. For we were all conceived in sin. That is what it means.
If that Guy gives his life to Christ, all sins will be gone!
If the head of Boko haram finds Jesus, all sins are gone and he will sit in heaven.
If Hitler found Jesus before he died, boom! Heaven.
Grace in the blood of Jesus for forgiveness of sins is mysterious.
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Abiola retweetet

The idea that every woman ovulates on day 14 after her period really needs to be unlearned.
The day you ovulate depends on your cycle length. So, it doesn’t happen on the same day for everyone
The whole “day 14” concept came from the fact that the luteal phase (the time between ovulation and your next period) usually lasts about 14 days.
We were simply taught the menstrual cycle using a 28-day example to make it easier to understand. But if your cycle is longer, say 30 or 35 days , your ovulation won’t fall on day 14.
It will happen later, because your body’s timing is not the same as someone with a perfect 28-day cycle.
Learn better here 👇
Pharm. Oluoma@zizelle_
THE FERTILE WINDOW Amaka is a young happily married woman excited about starting her family. Rebecca is a single, independent lady exploring womanhood. They both have something in common - Zero knowledge of their fertile window. What should Amaka and Rebecca know?
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Graduated with a First Class at 19!
Reintroducing:
Oluwafeyikemi Deborah Abiona
B.Sc Mass Communication (First Class Honours)
Thank you, God!💐


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Abiola retweetet

Sometimes, you read a story that makes the blood in your veins run cold.
Blessing's baby, Victory, was born premature and diagnosed with hydrocephalus (fluid in the brain), and she needs an urgent ₦1,000,000 surgery to survive.
Instead of support, Blessing’s husband called her a witch for having a sick child and threw her and their baby out onto the street.
Now, Blessing is alone, fighting for her daughter's life with nothing.
Her husband turned his back, but we will not.
AprokoNation, let's be the family she needs right now. Let's save Victory.
Account Name: Obukohwo Blessing
Account Number: 3581115542
Bank: EcoBank
If you cannot donate, please, I am begging you, your retweet is a powerful gift. It might be the one that brings the help this mother and child desperately need. God bless you.

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Abiola retweetet

The first Anaesthetic was administered in 1842 by Dr Crawford Long, but he didn’t officially publish until 1849.
However, on the 16th of October 1846, A dentist at Mass Gen, Dr William Morton publicly demonstrated the use of Ether to anaesthesise a patient for Surgeon, Dr John Warren to remove a neck tumor. That day known as Ether Day is the Birthday of Modern Anaesthesia.
Infact every 16th October is celebrated as World Anaesthesia Day.
P.S That’s in 2 days time
Takeaways.
1. Publish your work, if it is not documented, it’s not done
2. Anaesthesia and Dentistry have always had a close relationship, right from the start. (I can personally attest to this marriage! 😉)
3. The full potential of surgery was only unlocked by the advancement of anaesthesia.
Infact, Anaesthesia as a specialty elevated the entire practice of Medicine from barbaric butchering and bloodletting to the painless, precise care we provide today.
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By the time they are done with you, you’ll know the correct spelling
kieran🧃✝️@eko_kieran
My first ASSU strike, I'm shy guys 🙈
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