Patrice Awonseba Baba Musah, A Hitherto Unknown Ghanaian Doctor, Has Become A Celebrity In The Czech Republic
You'll be surprised to learn how many Ghanaians have achieved remarkable success in their professional lives in other countries while remaining relatively unknown in their home country. Ghana is a country full of brilliant people, but the majority of them face daily challenges in gaining admission to the appropriate professional institutions they desire, and those who do receive scholarships to study abroad frequently do not return home due to a variety of issues, including an unfavorable political climate, corruption, and underdevelopment. Baba Musah, 36, was born in Bolgatanga, Ghana, and is known in the Czech media as "an angel among healthcare workers" for assisting mothers in safely delivering their kids. "As a kid, I was always quite bashful during talks with the girls," Musah says, unaware that he would one day become a gynecologist. Musah, who excelled in general science subjects such as physics, mathematics, English, and agriculture while in high school in Ghana, chose to seek a scholarship abroad.
Patrice Awonseba Baba Musah is the chief of the ambulance at the Institute for Mother and Child Care (PMD) in Prague-Podol, where he is in his third year of employment. According to Musa, Ghana's population peaked at 14 million people in 1992. "Some families prefer to give birth on a specific day so that they can name their child. "I had no idea I wanted to be a doctor until I received a scholarship to study pharmacy. The gynecologist and obstetrician who chose to stay in the Czech Republic after graduation delivered thousands of babies, and last year he was nominated for an Angel among healthcare professionals award and won the first place in one of the highest medical awards given to medical practitioners in the Czech Republic, for his charm and sense of humor in the medical field.
"The sheer participation in the event was the valuation," Musah remarked in an interview with Helena KOOV. Patrice Musah is not the only one in his family who works in medicine; he has three sisters who work as midwives and a younger brother who has a finance degree. Many Ghanaians are unable to appreciate what they have because of tribalism. "To me, it implies that everyone has the same chance to do whatever they desire.
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