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Health Essentials

The wellness experience

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Washing hands with soap and water is important for one's physical health

Washing hands with soap and water is important for one’s physical health

There are thousands of diet plans and some people change them almost as often as they change their underwear and pills to be swallowed in a bid to fast-track the wellness dream.

The plastic surgeon’s blade and even prayers have all been called upon to perform miraculous acts. Is there a single path to achieving well­ness or has man found that wonder pill yet?

Is the result of an annual medical examination all that is needed to determine how well one is? Can you have great reviews in the clinic yet feel tired and unhappy? Does wellness obey the all or none law or is it a whole spectrum where majority of us fall within?

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Wellness involves at least six areas or pillars that we need to balance since they all work together to make us the best versions of ourselves.

When we fall short in any one of them, it may have consequences in other areas but we do not need to be perfect in any area; balance is all that is needed.

Sleep helps keep one's mental  health in great shape
Sleep helps keep one’s mental health in great shape

The era of lockdown for instance brought to the fore the importance of Social Wellness; many of us felt iso­lated when we had to avoid our work colleagues for weeks on end. Even the output of some of us dipped. Oh, you surely are not alone.

Even people you detested meeting in the office you now longed to spend time with. Breathe a sigh of relief; that feeling is normal, nothing untow­ard is happening to you.

The majority of us humans are social beings and we blossom when sur­rounded by family and friends and hugs and handshakes are the norm.

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The Six Pillars of Wellness.

1.Physical

2.Mental

3.Social

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4.Financial

5.Digital

6.Spiritual

Physical Wellness

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Are you taking proper care of your body? Do you exercise, eat right and get your regular medical examina­tions?

Avoid awkward postures like sitting slouched forwards or bending at the waist to pick an object. Surely you are washing your hands regu­larly with soap and water. Have you noticed the loud silence from cholera this year?

Mental Wellness

The way you think, act or feel falls into this category but it is defi­nitely not an island on its own. Your physical well-being and all the others impact on your mental health.

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Time to relax, sleep, manage your time, enjoy nature and be kind to others. These together with deep breathing and laughter, go a long way to keep your mental health in great shape.

Social Wellness

The relationships we have and the way we interact with others. Your mental and physical health all impact on your relationships.

When you exude happiness, peo­ple give it right back to you. Build strong relationships; just a few trust­worthy people who you can share your challenges with will go a long way to stabilise your mental health and pave the way for all others to flow.

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When you feel unduly stressed do you have anyone you can speak to before getting professional help? Do not be a loner.

Financial Wellness

How secured is your money? Are we prepared for emergencies in an uncertain future? We need baseline financial secu­rity to be able to get all the other pillars working seamlessly.

How can you eat well or get medical examinations done with no financial backing? Finances tend to be one of the greatest stressors in life. Do not ignore the need for financial stability, you need it more than you can imagine. Speak to someone who can assist you plan your future today.

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Digital Wellness

What measures are you taking that aims at regulating and improv­ing healthy use of technology? If you set virtual meetings, training pro­grammes etc. all day because you are working from home, then when do you get to rest your mind, eyes and back from prolonged sitting among many others? One thing will lead to another. Many of us can hardly unplug. Our phones are on 24/7 and we think sleep is a luxury. No! In­adequate sleep will open the flood­gates to a tonne of health challenges including stress, overeating, alcohol abuse, fatigue and even accidents from fatigue.

Get sleep; it is a lifeline!

Spiritual Wellness

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Are you connected to a greater being who provides us with a sense of purpose, values, principles, morals and beliefs among many others?

If you asked for my opinion, I rec­ommend God. Speak to him daily (prayer) and he will set you on the right path.

In all things do not specialise in one or a few of these pillars of well­ness. We should all aim at getting a fair balance in each area and we can be the very best of ourselves. Now do not put unnecessary pressure on yourself; everyone has challenges but taking one step at a time and always remembering that we need different aspects to make life the best that it can be.

AS ALWAYS LAUGH OFTEN, ENSURE HYGIENE, WALK AND PRAY EVERYDAY AND REMEMBER IT’S A PRICELESS GIFT TO KNOW YOUR NUMBERS (blood sugar, blood pres­sure, blood cholesterol, BMI)

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Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

Health Essentials Ltd/Mobissel

(www.healthessentialsgh.com)

*Dr. Essel is a medical doctor with a keen interest in Lifestyle medicine, he holds an MBA and is ISSA Special­ist in exercise therapy, fitness nu­trition and corrective exercise. He is the author of the award-winning book, ‘Unravelling The Essentials of Health & Wealth.’

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Thought for the week – “Defining health and wellbeing; The World Health Organisation (WHO) defines health as ‘a state of complete phys­ical, mental and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of dis­ease or infirmity’ (WHO, 1948).”

By Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

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Health Essentials

The Prostate Has Found Its Voice

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The prostate gland, a small but essential organ found only in men, plays a key role in reproductive health. It produces fluid that nourishes, protects, and transports sperm, yet many focus only on its connection to prostate cancer.

Location & Function

  • Situated between the bladder and penis, with the rectum behind it.
  • The urethra passes through the prostate, carrying urine and semen.

Common Prostate Conditions

1. Prostatitis – Infection of the prostate:

  • Symptoms: chills, fever, pus-like urethral discharge, painful urination, groin/testicular pain, painful orgasms, erectile dysfunction.
  • Advice: Seek professional help; do not self-medicate.

2. Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) – Non-cancerous enlargement of the prostate:

  • Symptoms: frequent urination (especially at night), urge incontinence, difficulty starting urination, weak stream, painful urination, blood in urine, terminal dribbling, and in severe cases, inability to urinate.
  • BPH can be extremely painful, sometimes compared to labor pains.

3. Prostate Cancer – Common among men, especially black men, often aggressive and with earlier onset:

  • Risk Factors: older age, African descent, family history, obesity.
  • Symptoms: frequent urination, straining, blood in urine/semen, weak urine flow, new erectile dysfunction; advanced stages may include fatigue, weight loss, and bone pain.

Diagnosis

  • Digital rectal examination – checks for irregular or hard areas.
  • PSA test, biopsy, ultrasound, CT/MRI/PET scans, bone scan.

Management

  • Holistic approaches include watchful waiting, medication, surgery, and radiation (external & brachytherapy).
  • Always discuss all options with your healthcare provider.

Risk Reduction Tips

  • Regular screening
  • Healthy, varied diet rich in fruits and vegetables (carrots, tomatoes, broccoli, kale, cauliflower)
  • Maintain a healthy weight
  • Exercise at least 5 days a week

Final Advice

  • Share this information – the prostate needs support!
  • Maintain good hygiene, walk and exercise daily, pray, and know your numbers (blood sugar, blood pressure, cholesterol, BMI).

Thought for the Week:

“There is no magic formula to being happy but making a conscious effort to be happy goes a long way.” – Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

Dr. Essel invites readers to the La Palm Royal Beach Hotel Wellness Festival on Saturday, November 29, 2025, at 6 a.m., to walk, exercise, network, and share ideas to stay healthy.

Contact: dressel@healthessentialsgh.com

By Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

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Health Essentials

Stop the silent killer: Breaking myths to prevent sudden deaths from high blood pressure

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• Ansah Moses Teye-Akam
• Ansah Moses Teye-Akam

Every week in Ghana, a life is cut short, some­times in the middle of traffic, sometimes at a desk, sometimes in the quiet of sleep. A father doesn’t come home. A sister doesn’t wake up.

A colleague slumps at work and never gets back up. Families are left asking why and you will hear statements like what happened? Was he sick? I just saw him, he has not shown signs of ailment, what a shock and so on.

Behind many of these sudden tragedies is a quiet, invisible force: high blood pressure, or hypertension. It doesn’t scream for atten­tion. It doesn’t always show symptoms. But it tightens its grip silently on hearts, on brains, on lives.

This is not just a medical issue. It is a human one, it is about behaviour, it is about ignorance and it is about lifestyle. It is the grandmother who never got her blood pressure checked because she felt “fine.”

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It is the taxi driver, the statistician, the nurse who ignored his pounding head­aches, thinking it was just stress. It is the young lady who was so vibrant at church and no one suspected she could fall and die. Because it shows no symptoms.

The alarming numbers we cannot ignore

The Ghana’s 2023 STEPS Survey on Non-Communica­ble Diseases conducted by The World Health Organisa­tion, Ghana Health Service and Ghana Statistical Service has revealed findings that should push for action.

According to the report, 21.7 per cent of adults aged 18 to 69 in Ghana are living with high blood pressure. Even more alarming is that 51.1 per cent of those with hypertension are not aware of their condition.

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This means that more than half of the people with dan­gerously high blood pressure are walking around without knowing it until tragedy strikes. That is the real dan­ger of this silent killer.

Literature has shown that hypertension is prevent­able and manageable. But only if we treat it like the threat, it is. That means regular checkups; that means understanding the risks and that means talking about it openly, urgently, and with compassion.

The deadly power of myths

Why are so many Ghana­ians untested or untreated? Is it out of ignorance, or the pervasive myths about hyper­tension and its treatment?

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• Some believe blood pressure medicine “weakens the body” or “shortens life.”

• Some believe blood pressure medicine “weakens the penis and kills sexual drive”

• Others think once you start taking medication, you are “dependent for life.”

• Many say, “I feel fine, so I must be fine.”

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These beliefs are not only false, but they are also deadly. The truth, according to the World Health Organ­isation, is that effective treatment can reduce the risk of stroke by up to 40 per cent and heart attack by 25 per cent. Avoiding treatment does not prevent depen­dence rather, it accelerates death.

As Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboag­ye, former Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, has noted, “Hypertension is preventable and treat­able, but our biggest battle is misinformation and late detection.”

A national conversation we must have

This is not just a health issue it is a national emer­gency. Sudden deaths rob families of breadwinners, communities of leaders, and the country of its productiv­ity. In every obituary notice caused by hypertension, there is a story of loss that could have been prevented with a simple blood pressure check and treatment.

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Behind every life saved is a moment of awareness, a decision to act, therefore, the media must rise to the challenge.

Radio and television pro­grammes should dedi­cate regular airtime to demystify hyper­tension. Newspapers should carry survivor stories, expert inter­views, and practical lifestyle advice.

Social media influ­encers should spread awareness in local languages, reaching young people who assume they are safe.

Public health experts also have a responsibility. Screen­ing must move beyond hospi­tals into churches, mosques, markets, schools, and workplaces. People should not have to wait for illness to know their BP status.

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What we can do together

To stop the silent killer, we need a collective response:

Check your blood pressure regularly, even if you feel healthy.

Follow medical advice faithfully if diagnosed because treatment saves lives.

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For healthy life­style, eat less salt, reduce alcohol, reduce starchy, fat and oil intake, avoid smok­ing, and exercise at least 30 minutes daily.

Encourage one another talk about blood pressure in families, commu­nities, and workplaces.

Conclusion: Silence is killing us

What kills is not just the disease, but the silence, fear, and myths that sur­round it. The STEPS 2023 re­port has sound­ed the alarm: nearly one in five Ghanaian adults has high blood pres­sure, and more than half don’t even know it.

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This is the time for bold conversation, public educa­tion, and decisive action. The media, health profes­sionals, policymakers, and ordinary citizens must join forces to expose the myths, spread the facts, and save lives. Let us not wait for another headline.

Let us make blood pres­sure a national conversation before it becomes a personal tragedy. With awareness, treatment, and collective will, Ghana can stop the silence and stop the sudden deaths from the silent killer.

Written by: Ansah Moses Teye-Akam – Senior Statis­tician, Sociologist/Scientific Research Organisational Expert.

Email: moses.ansah@ statsghana.gov.gh/an­sahmosesteyeakam@ gmail.com.gh Contact: 0244539034 / 0204359034

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