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This multiple award-winning Ghanaian nurse is a farmer too

A young <a href="https://www.pulse.com.gh/news/local/covid-19-7-doctors-dead-in-ghana/0pslwn2">Ghanaian midwife</a> in the Ashanti Region who has won multiple awards to her credit in her field of work has proven to have some passion for farming too.
This beautiful multiple award-winning Ghanaian nurse is a farmer too
This beautiful multiple award-winning Ghanaian nurse is a farmer too

Identified as Margaret Afriyie, the smart-looking health worker has won the First Lady’s Excellence Awards (Health) in 2021, according to a post sighted on the LinkedIn handle of Edward Asare. 

Before this latest achievement, she reportedly won the best midwife award in the Ashanti Region for the year 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak. 

As if all the above were not enviable enough, the hard-working midwife also won for herself the universal health coverage award at her workplace in the year 2019.

"Meet the award-winning midwife who is also a farmer Margaret Afriyie.

"She won the First Lady’s Excellence Awards (Health) in 2021.

"She won the best midwife award in the Ashanti Region (2020).

"In 2019, she won the universal health coverage award," Edward Asare captioned a photo of Margaret Afriyie on Linkedin.

Aside from her diligence and professionalism which have won her several awards, Margaret loves farming as her part-time work.

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She is seen in a photo gleefully posing with some crops in her farm.

It will not be surprising if Margaret is able to carve a niche for herself in the field of Agriculture just as she has done and in healthcare delivery.

In other news, a young junior high school student of Aggrey Road number two JHS has created a sound system using Bluetooth technology and plastic gallons.

Dext Technology Limited first posted the invention of Samuel Aboagye on Facebook before one Mckingtorch Makafui Awuku gave further details about how the talented young student was able to create what many people are now applauding him for.

Samuel used practical concepts of electric current flow, conductors and non-conductors as well as design thinking techniques to make the creative electronic device.

“A Bluetooth technology with plastic waste gallons built into a sound system by Samuel Aboagye of Aggrey Road No2 JHS, Tema. He used practical concepts of electric current flow, conductors and non-conductors as well as design thinking techniques to make this,” Mckingtorch Makafui Awuku wrote on Facebook to caption a photo of Samuel standing by his sound system.

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