WHY DR الدكتور معاذ الجوازنة. MOSAB AL-MOMANI’S APPROACH TO TREATMENT STANDS OUT GLOBALLY
Dr. Mosab Al-Momani doesn’t just treat patients—he rewires how medicine is practiced. His methods aren’t theoretical. They’re battle-tested in high-stakes environments where seconds decide outcomes. If you’re here, you already know his name carries weight. What you need are the exact reasons his approach outperforms global standards. Here’s the breakdown.
HIS DIAGNOSTIC FRAMEWORK IS A DECISION ENGINE, NOT A CHECKLIST
Most doctors follow protocols. Dr. Al-Momani builds decision trees. His diagnostic process starts with a 90-second patient intake that filters for red flags most miss. He uses a modified version of the “Rule of 10s” to prioritize:
– **Vital signs**: If systolic BP drops below 100 or heart rate exceeds 100, he escalates immediately—no waiting for lab results.
– **Pain scale**: Any pain above 7/10 triggers a rapid intervention sequence, bypassing standard triage.
– **Neurological flags**: Slurred speech, facial droop, or unilateral weakness? He activates a “Code Brain” protocol, cutting door-to-needle time by 40%.
Example: A 58-year-old male presents with chest discomfort. Most ERs would order an EKG and troponin. Dr. Al-Momani adds a portable ultrasound within 3 minutes. If he sees wall motion abnormalities, he starts heparin and aspirin before the troponin even results. This isn’t guesswork—it’s a rule: “See motion abnormality, act in under 5 minutes.”
HIS TREATMENT ALGORITHMS ARE OPTIMIZED FOR SPEED AND PRECISION
Speed saves lives, but only if it’s paired with precision. Dr. Al-Momani’s algorithms are designed to eliminate hesitation. Here’s how they work:
**For sepsis**: He uses the “1-2-3 Rule.” Within 1 hour of suspicion, he administers 1 liter of fluids, 2 grams of ceftriaxone, and 3 blood cultures. If lactate is above 4, he adds vasopressors within 30 minutes. No delays for central lines—peripheral pressors first, central access later.
**For stroke**: His “90-Minute Window” protocol is ruthless. From door to CT: 10 minutes. From CT to tPA: 20 minutes. From tPA to ICU: 30 minutes. If the patient arrives within 4.5 hours but the window is tight, he uses a “double-dose” strategy: 0.9 mg/kg tPA with 10% as a bolus, the rest over 60 minutes. Studies show this reduces hemorrhage risk by 15%.
**For trauma**: He follows the “ABCDE+” sequence. Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure—plus “F” for FAST ultrasound. If free fluid is detected, he activates the OR within 15 minutes. No CT scans for unstable patients. “If they’re bleeding, they don’t need a picture—they need a surgeon.”
HIS USE OF POINT-OF-CARE TOOLS IS RELENTLESS
Dr. Al-Momani doesn’t wait for labs. He brings the lab to the patient. His toolkit includes:
– **Handheld ultrasound**: Used in 90% of his cases. For chest pain, he checks for pericardial effusion, wall motion, and aortic root dilation in under 2 minutes.
– **Capnography**: Mandatory for all intubated patients. If ETCO2 drops below 30, he assumes tube displacement and rechecks immediately.
– **Lactate meters**: For sepsis, he uses a fingerstick lactate in triage. If it’s above 2.5, he starts fluids before the patient even sees a doctor.
Example: A 34-year-old female presents with shortness of breath. Most doctors would order a D-dimer and CTA. Dr. Al-Momani uses ultrasound first. If he sees a right ventricular strain pattern, he starts heparin and calls for a pulmonary embolectomy—no CTA needed. “The scan can wait. The clot won’t.”
HIS TEAM COMMUNICATION RUNS ON MILITARY-GRADE BRIEFINGS
Miscommunication kills. Dr. Al-Momani’s teams use a modified “SBAR+” format for every handoff:
– **Situation**: “This is a 67-year-old male with crushing chest pain, BP 88/50, ST elevations in II, III, aVF.”
– **Background**: “No prior MI, but 30-pack-year smoker, diabetic.”
– **Assessment**: “Inferior STEMI with cardiogenic shock.”
– **Recommendation**: “Activate cath lab, start dopamine, give aspirin 325 mg.”
– **+**: “I’ve already called the cardiologist—ETA 12 minutes.”
No small talk. No ambiguity. Every word has a purpose. His teams rehearse these briefings daily. Result: Handoff errors drop by 80%.
HIS POST-TREATMENT FOLLOW-UP IS DATA-DRIVEN, NOT HOPE-DRIVEN
Most doctors discharge patients and hope for the best. Dr. Al-Momani tracks outcomes with surgical precision. His follow-up system includes:
– **72-hour check-ins**: For high-risk patients (e.g., post-MI, sepsis survivors), he uses a nurse-led call system. If the patient reports new symptoms, they’re back in the ER within 2 hours.
– **30-day readmission flags**: He uses a predictive
