I Am In Africa - Med In Ghana

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D

deleted29780

I just entered UGMS IN GHANA. I AM SO HAPPY. I LOVE THIS FORUM
AND LIKE ALL THE MEDS AND PREMEDS. :)

Members don't see this ad.
 
Hi Akuffo.

Congratulations on entering one of the best med schools in Africa. It would be great, and readers would be benefited, if you might keep this thread active by posting some of your experiences there a U Ghana as you have them when you have time and need a diversion.

I know from reading another post of yours that you grew up in and lived in Ghana much of the time, but what preparation for entrance did you undergo, and what was the admission process like for you? Also, where do you intend to practice medicine?
 
Welcome to SDN! And congrats on getting into med school!
 
Members don't see this ad :)
Well medicine in Ghana is as competitive as that in the States.
I went thru 2 gruelling years in UG , to get a chance to enter UGMS. My interview was pretty hectic and at one point, I forgot
about my very high grade point, but somehow I got in. I will post
my experiences very soon. I will be working on my first CADAVER , this monday. GOD HELP ME :)
 
Please keep us informed of your experiences! Congrats

:)
-E
 
Just went to an International med meeting here at USC. The doctor who spoke is an ER doc at LAC-USC and travels to Ghana often. Can't think of her name but have any of you Ghana med students heard anything about this?
 
I'll be going to Ghana this September depending on if my loan comes in on time or next September if it does not come in this year. I'm depending on it for this September. I've read that Ghana only has 3 medical schools and St. Luke University, School of Medicine is one of the three.

I'm excited about going to Ghana. I'll be in Cape Coast, Ghana :cool: so perhaps at some point we can meet up. UGMS is in Accra so I'm sure that we can meet at least once. If anyone from Ghana can share their experience I would really appreciate it.
 
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Monday, December 08, 2003

ELABORATE CON ALLEGED: Man pretended to be a doctor,
prosecutor says

35-year-old indicted on charge of practicing medicine
without license at Henderson office

By GLENN PUIT
REVIEW-JOURNAL


Andrew Elias Michael
Scheduled to go on trial in February in District Court





At his Henderson medical office, Andrew Elias Michael
told his employees he was an esteemed surgeon capable
of performing complex operat! ions.

In this capacity, authorities allege, Michael
supervised numerous patients while they received
injections during medical procedures.

And he also gave medical advice.

But the Nevada attorney general's office says Michael
was never a doctor, just an old-fashioned con man.

"In short, (his) entire academic credentials are
founded on fraud," Nevada prosecutor Gerald Gardner
wrote in legal papers stemming from Michael's arrest
earlier this year.

There's no mention of any motive in Michael's court
file. Prosecutors have declined comment, as have
Michael's Las Vegas attorneys, Bill Terry and Linda
Norvell.

In October, a Clark County grand jury indicted the
35-year-old on a charge of practicing medicine without
a license. By that time, he was already out on bail
after his initial arrest. After the indictment,
Michael turned up in Kentucky as a fourth-year medical
student accompanying physici! ans on hospital rounds for
cardiothoracic patients.

When a media outlet in Kentucky reported on Michael's
pending criminal prosecution in Nevada, Michael was
dismissed from the medical student program at Central
Baptist Hospital in Lexington.

"We have been here for 50 years, and this is the first
time we've ever had a problem," said Ruth Ann
Childers, a spokeswoman for Central Baptist. "We have
since changed our policies."

Michael has pleaded innocent to the charge, and he is
scheduled to go to trial in February in District
Court. He is currently free on bail.

According to court records and grand jury transcripts,
Michael was the president of a Las Vegas company
called North American Medical Company in 2001 and
2002. The company ran Meadows Diagnostic Medical
Imaging Center, 35 S. Gibson Road in Henderson.

Listed phone numbers for both businesses are now
disconnected.

Appearing before the! grand jury in October, local
radiologist Deborah Dort said she was hired at Meadows
Diagnostic by Michael in 2002.

"He told me he was a surgeon, a cardiothoracic
surgeon," Dort said. "Specifically, he told me he had
done his surgical training at Johns Hopkins
University."

A cardiothoracic surgeon performs heart surgeries such
as bypasses and T-valve replacements.

Dort said that during her job interview, Michael also
claimed to be a former military pilot who was on the
verge of obtaining a law degree. Dort said Michael
produced a business card identifying himself as a
doctor and a member of the Fellow of the American
College of Surgery, an esteemed organization for
surgeons.

Another radiologist hired by Michael, Douglas C.
Howard, told a similar account.

"He held himself to be a cardiothoracic surgeon and
trained at Johns Hopkins," Howard told the grand jury.


After being hired at Meado! ws Diagnostic, the
radiologists noticed some curious behavior by Michael.
In one instance, Dort said, Michael was present as she
read a chest X-ray of a patient.

"I said, `Would you like to see the chest X-ray?' "
Dort recalled. "And I put it up, and he made some
statement about, `Oh, she's the patient (with) such
and such mass in her lung,' which she did not have.

"This was my first week there, (and) I thought, `Oh,
he's got her confused with someone else,' " Dort said.
"But it did strike me that a chest surgeon wouldn't
know how to read an X-ray."

Howard said Michael once came into the office to have
his own chest X-rayed.

"He did not know how to position himself to take a
chest X-ray," Howard said. "Kind of basic."

Dort said on certain occasions, Michael actually
supervised patients.

In December 2002, she said Meadows Diagnostic was
going to have to cancel a CAT scan on a patient
becau! se a doctor would not be present to supervise a
special type of injection necessary for the procedure.


The injection, in extremely rare cases, can cause an
anaphylactic reaction, heart attack or even death.

Dort said Michael later showed up and supervised the
injection.

"He showed up with a stethoscope around his neck,"
Dort said.

In another instance, during a doctors' meeting, Dort
questioned why Meadows Diagnostic did not have a
radiology nurse on staff.

"He (Michael) mentioned that if we ever got in a
severe situation ... and we called 911 and the patient
is crashing, that I can always call him for guidance
on what to do before ... the ambulance arrive(s),"
Dort said.

Another employee of Michael's, Gayle Raveling, told
the grand jury she was scheduled to undergo a medical
procedure on her heart in November 2002 at another
facility. She said Michael spoke to her about her
heart condi! tion and actually produced a replica of a
heart for reference as he discussed the upcoming
procedure.

"He was advising me that my left coronary artery
appeared closed, 90 percent closed," Raveling
testified. "My cardiologist hadn't told me that much
information.

"He said, `Yeah, you do need to have this procedure,'
" Raveling said.

Gradually, employees at Meadows Diagnostic became
suspicious. Dort said a private investigator in
January showed up in the business parking lot and told
an employee Michael wasn't a doctor.

Dort said she checked with Johns Hopkins and found
Michael had not studied there, according to court
documents. She immediately called the Nevada State
Board of Medical Examiners, and the agency started an
investigation.

Lynnette Krotke, chief licensing specialist for the
board, told the grand jury that the requirements for a
doctor being licensed in Nevada are extensive. But the!
agency's files showed Michael had never even applied
for a license.

An investigation by the attorney general's office now
indicates, according to court records, that Michael
supervised as many as 11 injections of patients during
imaging procedures. In a motion to increase bail for
Michael filed in November, the attorney general's
office reported that at the time of his arrest,
Michael "was conducting rounds at a pediatric clinic
in Las Vegas under the pretense that he was a
third-year medical student."

Gardner stated in court documents that authorities
learned Michael is enrolled at St. Luke's Medical
School, a private institution in Liberia, Africa.

St. Luke's worldwide office is in Los Angeles, but the
school is not accredited by the American Medical
Association and does not qualify in Nevada for
licensure, Gardner said.

Gardner also wrote in his bail motion that Michael's
admission to St. Luke'! s was based on his "purported
degree from Hamilton University, a Wyoming-based
Internet institution that has been described as a
`diploma mill' in recent national news stories."

In addition, Gardner wrote Michael was once the
subject of a criminal investigation in 1993 amid
allegations he submitted a forged University of
Nevada, Las Vegas transcript to the Nevada State Board
of Nursing in an effort to obtain a fraudulent nursing
license.

The Review-Journal was unable to locate any evidence
of charges being filed in that case.

Michael made an unsuccessful run for a state Assembly
seat in 1996 as a Republican candidate. "We need to
get Nevadans off of welfare and back into the work
community," he said in an interview before the
election.

The allegations against Michael may resemble a movie
script, but they're not unique. In one case documented
by the San Francisco Chronicle, a man posed as a
physicia! n in California for nearly 20 years.

The newspaper reported the man falsified the
credentials of a pharmacist and adopted the identity
of a Stockton, Calif., surgeon. He was sent to prison
five times but, upon release, resumed the con, the
newspaper reported.

The Connecticut Post also detailed the case of a man
accused of posing as a doctor at a clinic. The man,
arrested in April, required young patients to have
gynecological and breast examinations before they
received methadone for drug addictions, the paper
reported.

Dale L. Austin, senior vice president of the
Federation of State Medical Boards in the United
States, said Nevada and other states across the
country do a good job of enforcing laws relating to
doctor licensing, but he said when someone is intent
on deceiving the system, they can be difficult to
detect, especially when they do not apply for a
license.

"An individual who isn't licens! ed by the medical board
of a state doesn't normally come under the
jurisdiction of the medical board," he said.

Austin said detecting fake doctors requires diligent
regulation, public awareness and immediate reporting
by medical professionals who are suspicious of a
colleague's credentials.

"It all comes down to patient care and patient
protection," Austin said.
 
azskeptic said:
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Monday, December 08, 2003

ELABORATE CON ALLEGED: Man pretended to be a doctor,
prosecutor says

35-year-old indicted on charge of practicing medicine
without license at Henderson office

By GLENN PUIT
REVIEW-JOURNAL


Andrew Elias Michael
Scheduled to go on trial in February in District Court





At his Henderson medical office, Andrew Elias Michael
told his employees he was an esteemed surgeon capable
of performing complex operat! ions.

In this capacity, authorities allege, Michael
supervised numerous patients while they received
injections during medical procedures.

And he also gave medical advice.

But the Nevada attorney general's office says Michael
was never a doctor, just an old-fashioned con man.

"In short, (his) entire academic credentials are
founded on fraud," Nevada prosecutor Gerald Gardner
wrote in legal papers stemming from Michael's arrest
earlier this year.

There's no mention of any motive in Michael's court
file. Prosecutors have declined comment, as have
Michael's Las Vegas attorneys, Bill Terry and Linda
Norvell.

In October, a Clark County grand jury indicted the
35-year-old on a charge of practicing medicine without
a license. By that time, he was already out on bail
after his initial arrest. After the indictment,
Michael turned up in Kentucky as a fourth-year medical
student accompanying physici! ans on hospital rounds for
cardiothoracic patients.

When a media outlet in Kentucky reported on Michael's
pending criminal prosecution in Nevada, Michael was
dismissed from the medical student program at Central
Baptist Hospital in Lexington.

"We have been here for 50 years, and this is the first
time we've ever had a problem," said Ruth Ann
Childers, a spokeswoman for Central Baptist. "We have
since changed our policies."

Michael has pleaded innocent to the charge, and he is
scheduled to go to trial in February in District
Court. He is currently free on bail.

According to court records and grand jury transcripts,
Michael was the president of a Las Vegas company
called North American Medical Company in 2001 and
2002. The company ran Meadows Diagnostic Medical
Imaging Center, 35 S. Gibson Road in Henderson.

Listed phone numbers for both businesses are now
disconnected.

Appearing before the! grand jury in October, local
radiologist Deborah Dort said she was hired at Meadows
Diagnostic by Michael in 2002.

"He told me he was a surgeon, a cardiothoracic
surgeon," Dort said. "Specifically, he told me he had
done his surgical training at Johns Hopkins
University."

A cardiothoracic surgeon performs heart surgeries such
as bypasses and T-valve replacements.

Dort said that during her job interview, Michael also
claimed to be a former military pilot who was on the
verge of obtaining a law degree. Dort said Michael
produced a business card identifying himself as a
doctor and a member of the Fellow of the American
College of Surgery, an esteemed organization for
surgeons.

Another radiologist hired by Michael, Douglas C.
Howard, told a similar account.

"He held himself to be a cardiothoracic surgeon and
trained at Johns Hopkins," Howard told the grand jury.


After being hired at Meado! ws Diagnostic, the
radiologists noticed some curious behavior by Michael.
In one instance, Dort said, Michael was present as she
read a chest X-ray of a patient.

"I said, `Would you like to see the chest X-ray?' "
Dort recalled. "And I put it up, and he made some
statement about, `Oh, she's the patient (with) such
and such mass in her lung,' which she did not have.

"This was my first week there, (and) I thought, `Oh,
he's got her confused with someone else,' " Dort said.
"But it did strike me that a chest surgeon wouldn't
know how to read an X-ray."

Howard said Michael once came into the office to have
his own chest X-rayed.

"He did not know how to position himself to take a
chest X-ray," Howard said. "Kind of basic."

Dort said on certain occasions, Michael actually
supervised patients.

In December 2002, she said Meadows Diagnostic was
going to have to cancel a CAT scan on a patient
becau! se a doctor would not be present to supervise a
special type of injection necessary for the procedure.


The injection, in extremely rare cases, can cause an
anaphylactic reaction, heart attack or even death.

Dort said Michael later showed up and supervised the
injection.

"He showed up with a stethoscope around his neck,"
Dort said.

In another instance, during a doctors' meeting, Dort
questioned why Meadows Diagnostic did not have a
radiology nurse on staff.

"He (Michael) mentioned that if we ever got in a
severe situation ... and we called 911 and the patient
is crashing, that I can always call him for guidance
on what to do before ... the ambulance arrive(s),"
Dort said.

Another employee of Michael's, Gayle Raveling, told
the grand jury she was scheduled to undergo a medical
procedure on her heart in November 2002 at another
facility. She said Michael spoke to her about her
heart condi! tion and actually produced a replica of a
heart for reference as he discussed the upcoming
procedure.

"He was advising me that my left coronary artery
appeared closed, 90 percent closed," Raveling
testified. "My cardiologist hadn't told me that much
information.

"He said, `Yeah, you do need to have this procedure,'
" Raveling said.

Gradually, employees at Meadows Diagnostic became
suspicious. Dort said a private investigator in
January showed up in the business parking lot and told
an employee Michael wasn't a doctor.

Dort said she checked with Johns Hopkins and found
Michael had not studied there, according to court
documents. She immediately called the Nevada State
Board of Medical Examiners, and the agency started an
investigation.

Lynnette Krotke, chief licensing specialist for the
board, told the grand jury that the requirements for a
doctor being licensed in Nevada are extensive. But the!
agency's files showed Michael had never even applied
for a license.

An investigation by the attorney general's office now
indicates, according to court records, that Michael
supervised as many as 11 injections of patients during
imaging procedures. In a motion to increase bail for
Michael filed in November, the attorney general's
office reported that at the time of his arrest,
Michael "was conducting rounds at a pediatric clinic
in Las Vegas under the pretense that he was a
third-year medical student."

Gardner stated in court documents that authorities
learned Michael is enrolled at St. Luke's Medical
School, a private institution in Liberia, Africa.

St. Luke's worldwide office is in Los Angeles, but the
school is not accredited by the American Medical
Association and does not qualify in Nevada for
licensure, Gardner said.

Gardner also wrote in his bail motion that Michael's
admission to St. Luke'! s was based on his "purported
degree from Hamilton University, a Wyoming-based
Internet institution that has been described as a
`diploma mill' in recent national news stories."

In addition, Gardner wrote Michael was once the
subject of a criminal investigation in 1993 amid
allegations he submitted a forged University of
Nevada, Las Vegas transcript to the Nevada State Board
of Nursing in an effort to obtain a fraudulent nursing
license.

The Review-Journal was unable to locate any evidence
of charges being filed in that case.

Michael made an unsuccessful run for a state Assembly
seat in 1996 as a Republican candidate. "We need to
get Nevadans off of welfare and back into the work
community," he said in an interview before the
election.

The allegations against Michael may resemble a movie
script, but they're not unique. In one case documented
by the San Francisco Chronicle, a man posed as a
physicia! n in California for nearly 20 years.

The newspaper reported the man falsified the
credentials of a pharmacist and adopted the identity
of a Stockton, Calif., surgeon. He was sent to prison
five times but, upon release, resumed the con, the
newspaper reported.

The Connecticut Post also detailed the case of a man
accused of posing as a doctor at a clinic. The man,
arrested in April, required young patients to have
gynecological and breast examinations before they
received methadone for drug addictions, the paper
reported.

Dale L. Austin, senior vice president of the
Federation of State Medical Boards in the United
States, said Nevada and other states across the
country do a good job of enforcing laws relating to
doctor licensing, but he said when someone is intent
on deceiving the system, they can be difficult to
detect, especially when they do not apply for a
license.

"An individual who isn't licens! ed by the medical board
of a state doesn't normally come under the
jurisdiction of the medical board," he said.

Austin said detecting fake doctors requires diligent
regulation, public awareness and immediate reporting
by medical professionals who are suspicious of a
colleague's credentials.

"It all comes down to patient care and patient
protection," Austin said.

So what. We are talking about Arican medical student's not medical schools.
 
Jasminegab said:
So what. We are talking about Arican medical student's not medical schools.
Please, jasminegab, learn how to quote :oops:
 
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