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Kwame Owusu Brown
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Kwame Owusu Brown
@kowusugh
Bono Boy. Catholic. Ur future icon. ManUtd. ARTISTIC; highlife & good music, Photoshop, pencils😎 and ifbq IG @kowusugh fb @Kwame Owusu
University of Ghana Katılım Mart 2013
940 Takip Edilen1.3K Takipçiler
Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi
Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

Retweet ✅✅✅✅guys
help a brother 🙏🙏🙏❤️
Thanks Sena
PLEASE DONATE, SEND DETAILS BELOW
050 277 6169
telecel momo:
John Bredu Peasah
Account Number: 1044000008414
Account Name: JOHN BREDU PEASAH
Bank: ACCESS BANK
GoFundMe:
gofund.me/859a797d9
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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

The rot is so deep that in Ghana today, when a young person speaks, the first question is not whether the person is making sense.
The first question is, “Who paid you?”
That alone should scare us.
We have become so used to people selling their conscience that honesty now looks suspicious. Patriotism now looks sponsored. Speaking the truth now looks like an agenda.
And the saddest part is that the youth, who should be asking the hardest questions, are being trained to fight each other instead of questioning the system that keeps failing them.
They have turned our poverty into a weapon, our loyalty into a market, and our anger into entertainment.
So instead of demanding better roads, jobs, schools, healthcare, internet, drainage, security and real opportunities, we are busy asking which party someone belongs to.
A broken country does not only destroy buildings and institutions. It also destroys the people’s ability to believe that someone can still care without being paid.
That is the real tragedy. Ghana must work!
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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

I have been asked a few times what I think about Yeboah Agyekum Francis.
I have watched a couple of his videos. Not all…
My first honest reaction is that I was genuinely impressed.
1/
The first videos of his I watched were his explanations of Down syndrome and insulin resistance.
I do not say that lightly. These are not easy concepts to explain clearly, even in English.
Breaking them down in Twi in a way ordinary people can actually follow takes thought and real communication skills.
So NO, I do not agree with people who say he should not talk about health promotion or prevention because he is not a “doctor” Or whatever the reason may be.
That argument is lazy.
One of my favorite online health educators is Jessica Knurick. She is a nutrition scientist and public health communicator.
You don't need to be a doctor (MD) to talk about health promotion/prevention.
I believe Yeboah has a background in Medical Laboratory Science.
He clearly has a good grasp of the basic sciences from the few videos I have watched.
If someone understands the science, explains it accurately, and helps the public think better about health, that work has value.
In fact, I would take Yeboah Agyekum Francis over a hundred fitness influencers who understand neither metabolism nor evidence, yet speak with full confidence.
I will pick him over the 100s of unregulated spiritualists, fake Mallam/pastors, and herbalists that have inundated our social media feed.
We need more of him, not less.
2/
With that said, I only have 2 things I wish he would take note of ( Just a word of advice)
Health influence is a serious burden.
Once you build a large audience around scientific credibility, people stop judging you only by what you explain.
They also judge you by what you normalize, what you endorse, and what you attach your name to.
In health communication, TRUST is the currency. And trust is built on two things: accuracy and consistency.
——
2/
My first piece of advice is for him to be cautious about product promotion.
I watched a video of him that looked like he was making an ad for a herbal product or something.
That, to me, is a reputational risk.
I understand the pressure that comes with a large platform.
Once your audience grows, companies will come. Partnerships will come.
But that is exactly why the ethical standard must go up, not down.
A health educator should be more careful than the average influencer.
The larger the audience, the greater the duty to avoid products, claims, and endorsements that may confuse people who already struggle to tell science from marketing.
3/
My second concern, or I would say advice, is his language of divine calling.
You do not need a divine mandate to be a health educator.
That is a slippery slope.
Personal faith can inspire anyone’s work, and there is nothing wrong with that.
But once health advice starts sounding spiritually mandated rather than scientifically grounded, the public may struggle to separate evidence & critical thinking from loyalty.
Good health communication should always leave room for one simple question:
Is this based on evidence?
Mixing divinity and scientific evidence opens a gap for regulators.
——
So what am I saying?
I like what he is doing.
I think he has filled a real gap that we genuinely need.
But I also think this is the stage where discipline matters most.
He needs to be careful about what his credibility is being used to sell.
More aware that once people trust you in health, they may trust you beyond your evidence.
And one final thought
I would actually support the Ministry of Health sponsoring people like him to study public health or health communication formally.
A platform of that size becomes even more valuable when it is matched by stronger training in epidemiology, evidence appraisal, risk communication, and behavior change.
That is all X will allow me to write….
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@pharoukwahabu1 @RebirthCStudio This mentality is why accountability is lost in this country champ. It's not a matter of challenge but rather demanding accountability. But I don't blame us. That's how we have been brought up
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@RebirthCStudio How can broke unemployed graduate challenge a whole regional minister 😩😭
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We’re not serious in this country.
CDR AFRICA@cdrafrica
🇬🇭 Hajia4Reall takes the stage to present the Discovery of the Year award at the Ghana Movie Awards. Celebrating the next generation of stars!
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@Atom66240299 @samini_dagaati Raising awareness to who exactly? The town planners?
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@samini_dagaati As an Individual, Wetty you do for the Community after you blow ? Not even 1 song raising awareness.
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We have been in charge of town&country planning since 1957 yet we see floods every year.Who has been doing the planning Chale ? The one who gave people permits to build homes in the drains is the one I’m looking for. ….. mount a search Chale. #accrafloods #ghanafloods Pray for the affected ones 🙏🏾
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@koboateng @realKenAgyapong True... But what about citizens who don't do due diligence when it comes to researching on the lands they want to build but go on to build anyway?
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“The rain didn’t fail us. We failed ourselves.”
Respectfully, who is “we”?
The ordinary Ghanaian who loses his home every year? Or the political class that has known the causes of flooding for decades and still hasn’t fixed them?
We know the problem. Blocked drains. Poor planning. Building on waterways.
What Ghanaians want explained is why leaders have spent decades describing the problem instead of solving it.
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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

🚨ICYMI🇬🇭🏆: The Greater Accra Regional Minister has won “Regional Minister of the Year” while her region was underwater this very week at the Ghana Ministers of State Excellence Honours.
3,000 streetlights later, the city’s still dark.
That’s not all.
“Best Deputy Minister” went to the Deputy Minister for Transport whose commuters are still stranded at the station(s) & junction(s).
Ghana Ministers of State Excellence Honours.
Read that title again. Lol.
🦅🇬🇭


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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

Someone decided to organize Ministers’ Awards and not one person paused to ask whether it was a good idea?
You got dressed up and accepted awards from yourselves instead of being judged by the people you serve?
What kind of self-congratulation exercise is this?
At a time when communities are flooding, this is the optics you chose?
Bad. Very bad look.
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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

Accra has a traffic problem.
Over the past 2 months we’ve been digging for secrets on how Accra got into this mess, and more importantly how we dig ourself out.
and we’re finally ready to share it.
Our first explainer - Accra, the City that Can’t Move, premieres on YouTube today at 6pm.
see you thereee.
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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi
Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

Help a brother ✅
‼️‼️‼️stiff person syndrome‼️‼️‼️‼️ #SPS can affect anyone, even children. We believe Lord Jesus is the Healer. While we pray and trust Him, we still need awareness so people can understand, support and get the right help. Thanks guys ✊🏾👌
No more controversy
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I was in uni at the time,first or second year, I think. @kowusugh was holding the album (CD) he had just bought and encouraged me to give it a listen. Best decision ever.
M.anifest@manifestive
What was happening in your life when Nowhere Cool was released a decade ago….
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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

If you come across this, kindly donate and repost for others to see. You can watch the video below or read his latest post on IG. 🙏🏻
Momo Telecel : 0502776169
Name - John Bredu Peasah
GofundMe: gofund.me/9b67866cf


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Kwame Owusu Brown retweetledi

The Chiefs and people of Tarkwa, Huni have appealed to President Mahama to renew the mining agreement with Goldfields which expires in 2027.
Commercial underground mining started in Tarkwa by the British Colonial Government in 1874.
Goldfields have owned the mines since 1993.
The chiefs argue that, Goldfields operations has contributed significantly towards the development of their communities.
Ladies and Gentlemen, this is Tarkwa in its glory.

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