humanity
Humanity begins at home.
The Rise of Virtual Medical Scribes: Transforming Clinical Workflows
In today’s rapidly evolving healthcare landscape, physicians are expected to balance increasing documentation requirements with patient care. While electronic health records (EHRs) offer streamlined data management, they’ve also become a significant source of physician burnout. This is where a virtual medical scribe becomes an invaluable solution.
By Frank j Monroe7 months ago in Families
The Bench Under the Old Maple: A Story of Memory, Love, and Quiet Places
Start writing... There was once an old wooden bench under a tall maple tree. Most people walked past it without looking. To them, it was just a bench—old, broken, and unimportant. But for me, it meant everything.
By Qaseem Ahmadzai7 months ago in Families
This Was Home
The strobe light, brighter than the day, blinked like a heartbeat over the desert floor. It pulsed from the top of a rusted radio tower that no longer transmitted anything but nostalgia. We had seen it a hundred times—on aimless drives, on late-night hikes, on those summer nights when the air was too hot to sleep. But this night was different.
By MANZOOR KHAN7 months ago in Families
Stay Full and Energized All Day with These High-Fiber Snacks for Weight Loss
When it comes to managing your weight and maintaining steady energy levels throughout the day, snacking can either be your best friend or your worst enemy. Many of the convenient, processed snacks available on the market are packed with refined carbs and added sugars, offering a quick energy boost followed by a crash that leaves you hungrier than before. Instead of reaching for chips or candy bars, consider fiber-rich snacks that support weight loss, gut health, and long-lasting energy.
By Ahmad shah7 months ago in Families
Why Telehealth Needs Virtual Scribes”
Why Telehealth Needs Virtual Scribes The rapid evolution of telemedicine has brought undeniable benefits to healthcare, transforming patient access and streamlining delivery. Yet, as telehealth grows, so does the documentation burden on providers. This article explores how virtual medical scribe services, remote medical scribe support, scribe for doctor solutions, and medical transcription service offerings are revolutionizing telehealth documentation—freeing physicians to reconnect with the heart of medicine: patient care.
By Frank j Monroe7 months ago in Families
The Chair by the Mango Tree
I never thought a simple wooden chair could hold so much meaning. It sat under the mango tree in our ancestral courtyard for over two decades, weathered by time, dust, and laughter. But to us, it was Dada’s throne — my grandfather’s favorite place in the whole world.
By Muhammad Usama7 months ago in Families
Old is Gold: The Lantern That Lit More Than Just Rooms
In the dusty corner of an old wooden shelf sat a brass lantern—its glass smudged with age, its metal dulled by time. To most, it was just a relic, a forgotten object from the past. But to me, it was a treasure chest that didn’t need to be opened to spill stories; it only needed to be lit.
By Leah Brooke7 months ago in Families
“Where Wounds Learned to Heal”
In the quiet corridors of St. Augustine’s Hospital, far from the bustle of emergency rooms and the routine calls of overhead intercoms, there was a room—Room 217—that held no fame, no groundbreaking technology, and no miracle drugs.
By Khubaib saeed 7 months ago in Families
Her mother's Enemy . AI-Generated.
Chika had never believed in love at first sight until she met Raymond. They bumped into each other at a book launch in Enugu. He was confident, eloquent, and surprisingly humble for someone who came from a wealthy family. Chika was a final-year literature student, living modestly with her widowed mother, Mma Ngozi. Raymond was pursuing his MBA and had just returned from London. They had nothing in common on the surface, yet their souls found connection over poetry and palm wine. He loved how grounded she was. She adored his discipline and vision. Within three months, they were inseparable. But they kept their relationship quiet. Chika wasn’t ready to tell her mother just yet. Mma Ngozi was fiercely protective and often reminded Chika never to "trust the children of men who wear polished shoes and speak sweet English." Eventually, Chika insisted they take the next step. She invited Raymond home for Sunday lunch. As Raymond stepped into the compound, Mma Ngozi froze at the sight of him. Her hands trembled. Chika was confused. Raymond respectfully greeted her, but Mma Ngozi ignored him. She looked at Chika and said coldly, “That boy cannot step inside my house.” After much begging and pleading, the truth came out: Raymond’s father was Chief Damian Obasi—a man who, decades ago, had falsely accused Mma Ngozi of theft when she worked as a secretary in his company. She was jailed for two years. Her fiancé left her. Her life was ruined. Chief Obasi rose in wealth and fame. Mma Ngozi fell into poverty and shame. Raymond was shocked. He had never heard that story. His father, he said, was “a man of integrity.” Chika was torn. Could she continue to love the son of her mother’s destroyer? That night, Raymond went home and confronted his father. At first, Chief Obasi denied it. But when pressed, he finally admitted: “Yes, I did it. She knew too much. She caught me diverting company funds. It was her word against mine. I protected myself. That was business.” Raymond couldn’t believe it. His father showed no remorse. Meanwhile, Mma Ngozi begged Chika to end the relationship. “Love is not stronger than betrayal,” she warned. “If you marry him, you marry my pain.” But Chika loved Raymond—and she had her own mind. The Truth Runs Deeper One week later, Chika received a call from Raymond. “I need you to meet someone,” he said. They met at a quiet café outside town. To Chika’s surprise, Raymond arrived with a woman—his mother. Not Chief Obasi’s wife. The woman introduced herself as Grace. Raymond’s biological mother. She explained she had been Chief Obasi’s secretary... the very same time Mma Ngozi worked there. Grace revealed that she and Mma Ngozi were close friends. When Ngozi was accused, Grace tried to testify but was threatened. Out of fear and silence, she left the country. She later gave birth to Raymond in the UK—after Chief Obasi raped her during that same period. Raymond was not raised by Chief Obasi. He only reconnected with his father in adulthood after returning to Nigeria. Chika broke down in tears. Her mother’s enemy had never truly been Raymond. The real enemy was silence and shame passed through generations. She begged her mother to meet Grace—and they did. For the first time in 30 years, Mma Ngozi found closure. Two women, both victims of the same man, finally stood side by side as survivors. Chika and Raymond decided to marry—but not in grandeur. They held a small village ceremony, with both mothers present, standing united. Chief Obasi was not invited. When he heard of the wedding, he tried to send a gift. Chika sent it back… unopened. Love doesn’t conquer all—but truth, when faced with courage, can heal even the deepest generational wounds.
By Muhammad sufyan7 months ago in Families











