News
Make health priority …Journalists told
A Group photograph of journalists and personnel from Pleasant Medical Centre
A Physician Assistant with the Pleasant Medical Centre, Rocky Tettedzie, has advised journalists to consider their health status in their quest to meet deadlines for productions.
He said it was sad that the lifestyle of media personnel impacted negatively on their health.
He said this when he addressed journalists in Tema as a Resource Person at a health screening programme as part of activities organised by the Tema regional branch of the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) to mark its 75th anniversary celebration.
Mr Tettedzie said journalists could only be productive if they were in good health, as a result, he urged them to take their health seriously by making a conscious effort to check on their status often.
“Even if you are the busiest person, you should always factor that into your plans for the year. For instance, every six months or at most every year, you must go to the hospital for a checkup,” he advised.
He stated that people had escaped death because of getting themselves frequently screened while others also unfortunately died because their conditions had gotten worse before they went to the hospital.
“Journalists must not wait to feel pain or discomfort before making it to the hospital. In that case, the situation might be going into its full blown stage but make it a constant practice.”
He said sometimes, people fear that if they left their jobs, there would be no one to fill that space but forget that when they pass on, the same work would be done, sometimes without struggle.”
The media personnel were screened for prostate, typhoid, lipid profile, blood sugar, malaria, haemoglobin and blood pressure for free through a collaboration by the GJA and Pleasant Medical Centre, Ashaiman.
They also received talks on preventive health, hypertension, cervical cancer, prostate cancer, diabetes, among others.
The theme for the anniversary is “75 years of excellence in journalism: honouring the past, embracing the present, shaping the future”.
From Dzifa Tetteh Tay, Tema