IvanMuta

4.6K posts

IvanMuta

IvanMuta

@MmutaMD

medical doctor, public health specialist, passionate about women’s health

شامل ہوئے Mart 2022
856 فالونگ235 فالوورز
The Charity Guy
The Charity Guy@roxie_ug·
🚨 Serious Security Concern at Roswell Women’s and Children’s Hospital ‼️ @RoswellKampala I am extremely disappointed & concerned about a recent incident involving my vulnerable patient under care at Roswell Hospital. The patient (in orange left her sickbed to go for a short call) and then: An unidentified individual was able to: * Enter the hospital without proper registration * Bypass security and reception protocols * Access a private patient ward without authorization * Steal a patient's personal property (iPhone 16 Pro Max) This raises serious questions about patient safety and security procedures within the facility. Hospitals are meant to be safe environments, especially for patients who are already in a vulnerable condition. The most troubling part is the lack of response and assistance from the hospital following the incident. No meaningful support, accountability, or clear explanation has been provided so far. 1. How is it possible for an unregistered individual to freely access patient areas? 2. What security measures are actually in place to protect patients and their belongings? 3. Why has there been no proactive effort to resolve or even properly address this incident? This situation reflects a concerning lapse in basic security protocols and patient protection standards. I urge Roswell Hospital to: • Review and strengthen visitor access controls • Provide transparency about what went wrong • Take responsibility and support the affected patient Patients and their families deserve safety, accountability, and respect-not silence. #PatientSafety #HospitalSecurity #Negligence #Accountability #HealthcareStandards
The Charity Guy@roxie_ug

I have a burning dissatisfaction with Rosewell Women and children’s hospital. I’ll be back to jazz you, stay tuned. 💔

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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@DailyMonitor I have come to realize that there is a lot of knowledge deficit among patients and their lawyers, sometimes they speak things and you like what a hell??? At any given time there is an SHO in kawempe
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Daily Monitor
Daily Monitor@DailyMonitor·
How woman lost uterus to alleged intern doctors Nalubega claims she became uneasy in the operating theatre after noticing what she believed were intern doctors preparing to operate without visible supervision bit.ly/3QvfPl5?utm_me…  #MonitorUpdates
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@hotniqqha @MusigyiGilbert @MwesigyeWalter You should always make your points clear . When you say most hysterectomies end up in ICU . It is not true. You should have said most sTAH in kawempe end up in ICu.
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@MusigyiGilbert @MwesigyeWalter @hotniqqha Naye you people you over talk about things with limited knowledge. Most hysterectomies are electives (TAH) . Very few few hospitals have functional ICU’s. It is true a small percentage of STAH end up in ICU.
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Dr. Gilbert
Dr. Gilbert@MusigyiGilbert·
@MwesigyeWalter Mr. Walter you sound like you know what you are talking about but unfortunately you don't. @hotniqqha is an Intern Dr. at KNRH (the hospital in question) and when he says that "all Hysterectomy patients end up in ICU", in your mind of minds, do you think he's telling lies ??
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@TonyNatif The patient heard a kidney dish and thought her kidneys are going . Then met a lawyer who doesn’t do any background check
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Anthony Natif
Anthony Natif@TonyNatif·
Doctors have made Tonny Tumukunde delete. Hopefully an education has been had. This business of lawyers talking about “feeling pain in the pancreas” and harvesting kidneys during C-Sections should stop!
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Dr. Sîrjåh Ivan
Dr. Sîrjåh Ivan@kim_chrisivans·
@MmutaMD @hotniqqha You can't investigate for what you don't know!! 🤝 And to know what to investigate for, you must interact with the patient I need part of the school fees u spent in school even😂😂💀
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Aine Derrick
Aine Derrick@hotniqqha·
There's one thing AI will never replace. It's that human interaction with the patient. Yes, AI systems can be programmed to accurately diagnose, prescribe and even do surgeries. But that's just as far as it can go. and that's not enough
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Phiona Kyeru
Phiona Kyeru@kyeruphiona·
Moving abroad has a way of humbling you that nobody talks about before you board that flight. Accountants, engineers, lawyers, managers. All in the same care home. Same warehouse. Same cleaning job. Qualifications packed away somewhere in a folder. Collecting dust. You don't arrive and start where you left off. You start from zero. Sometimes below zero. The lucky few, maybe 1 in 20, eventually find their way back to what they trained for. The rest either make peace with where they are or go back to school and start all over again. And through all of it, life doesn't pause. Rent is due. Food doesn't buy itself. So you put on the uniform. You show up. You survive. Nobody tells you that part. 😶
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@aitajoel Then there comes a glorified lawyer saying there is kidney harvesting taking place in iganga by a medical officer. What do they teach in law school??!??
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Joel JAFFER Aita
Joel JAFFER Aita@aitajoel·
ORGAN TRANSPLANT: FROM AN ENGINEER'S EYES The invisible infrastructure that makes miracles possible When you hear "organ transplant," you think of a surgeon. I think of a building. Because before a single suture is placed, an extraordinary engineering ecosystem must already be in perfect operation. Let me walk you through it. 🏗️ THE OPERATING THEATRE A transplant theatre is not your ordinary operating room. It is a precision-engineered environment. It's a 2 in 1 facility. One room for the Patient, the other for the donor. As seen in the picture for Mulago. At its heart is a Laminar Flow System a carefully engineered air movement system that delivers ultra-clean air in a single, unidirectional stream directly over the sterile surgical field, cycling the entire room's air up to 500 times per hour. Dirty, contaminated air is continuously extracted while clean, HEPA-filtered air flows in creating a protective "curtain" of purity over the patient. The goal: reduce airborne contamination to near zero. In transplant surgery, a single airborne pathogen can cost a life. 🫁 THE PIPED MEDICAL GAS MATRIX Behind those theatre walls runs a network of over 10 piped medical gases, each with dedicated Colour-coded pipelines, pressure regulators, and alarm systems. These include: Oxygen (O₂) life support & anaesthesia Nitrous Oxide (N₂O) anaesthetic agent Medical Air for ventilators Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) surgical insufflation Nitrogen (N₂) powering surgical tools Helium specialised respiratory support Argon electrosurgical units Xenon emerging anaesthetic use Vacuum (AGSS) anaesthetic gas scavenging Medical vacuum suction systems Instrument air clean dry air for sensitive equipment Each gas line has its own zone valve, pressure monitoring, and emergency isolation point. Failure of any one system mid-surgery is catastrophic. That is why we engineer for 100% redundancy. 🏥 THE DEDICATED TRANSPLANT ICU Here is where many people are surprised. The transplant journey does not begin in the theatre. It begins in a dedicated Intensive Care Unit, sometimes a week before the surgery. Why? Because the patient's immune system must be deliberately suppressed, reduced almost to zero before the new organ arrives. 🛡️ WHY SUPPRESS IMMUNITY? THE SCIENCE ENGINEERS MUST UNDERSTAND Your immune system is a brilliant defense force. It recognises "self" from "non-self." When a foreign body enters a virus, bacteria, or a transplanted organ it attacks and destroys it. This is called organ rejection. To prevent it, doctors use immunosuppressant drugs to essentially stand down the immune army. The patient's body is made deliberately vulnerable so that when the new organ arrives, it is accepted not attacked. But here is the engineering challenge this creates: A patient with near-zero immunity is extraordinarily fragile. Their ICU environment must now function as an external immune system. ⚙️ WHAT THE ICU MUST THEREFORE PROVIDE This is where infrastructure becomes medicine: 🔹 Positive pressure rooms air flows out of the room, preventing external pathogens from entering 🔹 HEPA filtration capturing particles as small as 0.3 microns 🔹 Dedicated nursing stations with full barrier protocols 🔹 Piped oxygen, suction, and monitoring at every bed head 🔹 24/7 building management system (BMS) monitoring temperature, humidity, air changes, all logged in real time 🔹 Redundant power no transplant ICU runs on a single feed. Generator backup kicks in within seconds. The room is not just a room. It is a life-support shell. 🔌 THE POWER INFRASTRUCTURE A transplant facility requires: -Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) for critical equipment -Standby generators with automatic transfer switches -Category 1 essential circuits (life support can never go dark) -Isolated Power Systems (IPS) in theatres to prevent micro shock to open-body patients The electrical engineer's work is as critical as the surgeon's. 🌡️ HVAC: THE UNSUNG HERO The Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning system in a transplant facility is a separate engineering discipline entirely: -Theatre: Minimum 20 air changes per hour (often 25–30 for transplant) -Laminar flow zone: up to 500+ air changes per hour at the canopy -ICU: 15–20 air changes per hour -Pressure differentials maintained between every zone -Temperature control to within ±0.5°C -Humidity held between 40–60% to prevent static and infection If HVAC fails, surgery stops. Full stop. 🔬 THE ENGINEERING BOTTOM LINE Organ transplantation is rightly celebrated as a triumph of medicine. But it is equally a triumph of engineering. Every life saved on that table was first saved by: → An HVAC engineer who specified the laminar flow unit → An electrical engineer who designed the UPS system → A medical gas engineer who sized the pipeline manifolds → A hospital planner who laid out the ICU pressure cascades → A building services engineer who commissioned the BMS We do not wear scrubs. We do not stand at the table. But we built the table. Joel Aita | CEO, Joadah Group | Hospital Infrastructure & Engineering
Joel JAFFER Aita tweet media
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MR G🇺🇬
MR G🇺🇬@Magyezi_Reagan·
Those who were saying that it’s Ai,,check those two pics ….!!!No difference🤪
MR G🇺🇬 tweet mediaMR G🇺🇬 tweet media
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Nuel Muhumuza
Nuel Muhumuza@NuelMuhumuza·
Never seen an Entitled lot like the pharmacists! Pharmacists want to dispense,treat,carry out surgeries,Make drugs,Supervise hospitals,Supervise clinics,Supervise pharmacies & also supervise drug factories! 😅Niggas Call themselves Drs too! Its always the pharmacists complaining & Throwing shade everytime!
Bill Adrati, M.P.S.@BillAdrati

MISLEADING: These are 3 years BSc. Pharmaceutical Sciences fellas in MUST. Not qualified to supervise drug manufacturing, not regulated, no professional & ethical responsibility Pharmacists- 5/6 years training have the right competencies & skills to supervise Manufacture of drugs

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BHARO💀
BHARO💀@irolinboy__·
First marriage and your man doesn’t eat sugar,salt,meat and cooking oil 😂😂😂😂
BHARO💀 tweet media
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@davisnganzi Those are lies, not every doctor can harvest a kidney, kidneys are retro peritoneal organs actually very few doctors have ever seen a kidney with their naked eyes.
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Davis Mooti
Davis Mooti@davisnganzi·
I honestly don’t know what is right. Recently a one Doctor from Mulago said that this organ harvesting business was not achievable in Uganda. He sighted it as a very complicated procedure since there are no facilities to keep the organ functioning properly. He said it was only possible if the Recipient and Donor were in the same room
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@CKyobutungi @DoreenNyanjura When you say 30k dollars it doesn’t scare. Tell us that it needs about 70M Uganda shillings just to step in the states, to breath that air for two days
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Dr. Catherine Kyobutungi Muzukulu wa Bityo
Because of the recently introduced US visa restrictions, we had to pay USD 30K as visa bonds for two Ugandan researchers to attend a conference. Think about this for a moment ⁉️‼️
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@TumukundeTT As a lawyer you should have consulted a medical doctor before posting this. Not every doctor can harvest a kidney. We have one transplant center. People go through rigorous tests to find a match. Kidneys are not matooke that any one can buy.
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Lucky Munah🧕💜
Lucky Munah🧕💜@MunahLucky·
Does your mum know you’re calling her age mate ‘baby’?🤭
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Lucky Munah🧕💜
Lucky Munah🧕💜@MunahLucky·
Could you marry someone who is more than 12 years older than you?
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IvanMuta
IvanMuta@MmutaMD·
@AbiazRwamwiri @GershomMuganga Everyone is shouting five years, most practicing pharmacists did fours years, the five years just came in when you guys started calling yourselves doctors. You wanted to spend more time like doctors
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Abiaz Rwamwiri
Abiaz Rwamwiri@AbiazRwamwiri·
@GershomMuganga That sounds like “byoona bikola nga Samona” They are two different professions, that’s why one does 5 years and another 3! That’s why one is highly regulated by a professional body and another is under an association!
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Gershom Muganga
Gershom Muganga@GershomMuganga·
A person specifically trained in that area already understands all the strictness, and all reasons. These are not from neptune but rather the basic principals in pharm sciences. There is no question in our competence, except in the "professional title"
Abiaz Rwamwiri@AbiazRwamwiri

@GershomMuganga @IAM_agaba No, you will do what you are competent in! Pharmacutical industry is strictly regulated for a reason!

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