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  • I.C. Quaye champions mosquito-free Obama visit

    Ex-Greater Accra Minister Sheick I.C Quaye is set to rid the capital of mosquitoes ahead of the visit of the US President Barack Obama.

    In what passes as one of his explosive comic reliefs, the Ayawaso Central MP told his colleagues on the floor of the House on Tuesday that it is a well known fact that there are mosquitoes in the capital, saying his mass spraying exercise would 'restrain the circulation' of the dangerous insect.

    Having penciled Wednesday, July 8, 2009 for the spraying exercise, Sheikh Quaye called on the media to support his 'worthy cause'.

    "We will spray and spray and when Obama comes he will not have a mosquito bite and will go away free from malaria," he rattled, provoking endless laughter from the floor.

    I.C. Quaye last year embarked on a similar exercise in Alajo, Odawna river and the Kpeshie lagoon in Teshie which are notable breeding places for mosquitoes.


    Story by Nathan Gadugah/Myjoyonline.com


     

  • ‘Disaster looms if…’

    The Upper West Regional Director of Health Services, Dr Alexis Nang-Beifubah, has stated that the country risks a looming disaster, if it fails to put in place the requisite mechanisms in the face of an imminent outbreak of the Human Influenza A (HI NI).

    "We had all the time to tackle this issue since the first case was reported, but we have not done so. If we fail in the face of a possible outbreak of this disease, we would have to blame ourselves," he cautioned.

    At a day's sensitization workshop on the disease in Wa, Dr Nang-Beifubah deplored apathy among Ghanaians and stressed that "we must begin to learn from other countries to be able to make amends".

    Citing the recent floods that hit some parts of Accra as an example, Dr Nang-Beifubah noted that it was all because "we have failed to learn from our past mistakes".

    He mentioned some similar influenza pandemics in the past as the Spanish flu in 1918 and the Hong Kong flu, which occurred in 1960 and killed one million people, and said the Human Influenza A (HI N I) was not a new disease.

    Giving an overview of the disease, a biomedical scientist at the Wa Regional Hospital, Madam Theresa Salifu, said the disease, which had been detected in South Africa, Egypt and lately Cote d'Ivoire, was transmitted through breathing, coughing and sneezing, among others.

    She described it as a highly contagious disease, saying "we must all help in containing its infections if it is detected in the country".

    Madam Salifu mentioned some of the early symptoms as sore throat, aching muscles, hay fever and difficulty in breathing.


    Source: Daily Graphic

  • Ridge Hospital chokes with Pregnant women

    Ghana’s quest to reduce infant and maternal mortality in accordance with the Millennium Development Goals could be greatly compromised if immediate steps are not taken to address the lack of logistics and staff in maternity facilities in the country.

    Hundreds of the pregnant women continue to queue daily for care at health facilities with limited staff and inadequate logistics.

    Joy News reporter, Aseye Nutsukpui, who visited the Ridge Hospital's Obstetrics and Gynaecology Department said conditions there were worrying.

    The centre has been in and out of the news recently following allegations of negligence in its maternity unit.

    But a closer look reveals the department is facing serious staff challenges and space constraints.

    The Obstetrics and Gynaecology Department of the Ridge Hospital comprises four units, namely the antenatal unit, the female ward, the labour ward and the postnatal unit.

    Of the four, the antenatal and labour wards are the busiest. Upon entering the antenatal unit, one is confronted by rows of women in various stages of pregnancy.

    Last May alone, the unit received more than one thousand and two hundred antenatal outpatients.

    The labour ward is also busy, handling an average of thirty-five deliveries daily.

    Dr. Emmanuel Srofenyo is the head of the department and says staff and the facilities at the gynaecology ward are over-stretched.

    Dr. Srofenyo believes more pregnant women are going to Ridge because of a new pain management technique, which is being pioneered at the hospital.

    This, coupled with the free medical care for pregnant women has driven a lot of them to Ridge and this has inevitably put a strain on the hospital’s personnel and facilities.

    The department has only two specialist obstetrician gynaecologists, a few resident doctors who are posted to the unit for their rotation, and sixteen midwives.

    The Senior Nursing Officer, Rebecca Fofo Larkai, explaining the staff situation at the unit said more medical staff are needed to save lives.

    The patients take up every available space at the gynaecology department of Ridge and benches have been turned into makeshift beds.

    Dr. Srofenyo says within these constraints staff always strive to make sure that quality of care is not compromised.

    The situation at Ridge is not very different from what pertains in other maternity wards in hospitals around the country.

    It points to an urgent need for the health authorities do more to equip and staff the maternity wards as efforts are made to reduce maternal and infant mortality to the barest minimum.


    Source: Fiifi Koomson


     

  • Bolga Hospital undertakes 10 successful fistula operations

    Ten women suffering from obstetric fistula, have successfully undergone reconstructive surgery at the Bolgatanga Hospital.

    Obstetric fistula, a severe medical condition, is a hole created between the vagina and anus or the bladder.

    It affects women who undergo difficult prolonged labour during delivery when the pressure of the baby tears some tissues and creates a hole that leaks urine or faeces thereby giving their victims a bad odour.

    The condition, which is said to be the most devastating of all child bearing problems, can get so bad that the women are shunned by their neighbours and sometimes divorced by their husbands and unable to do any activity that involves other people because nobody wants to get near them.

    Dr Peter Baffoe, a gynaecologist at the Bolgatanga Hospital, who performed the surgeries, said more than 100 such cases had been identified in the Upper East Region and about 30 operated upon with a success rate of 70 per cent.

    He said some of the cases were old conditions where the women had had the problems for more than 15 years, thus making it more difficult to correct successfully.

    Dr Baffoe said even though the treatment was covered under the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), the women were too poor to register.

    He said that most of the operations performed so far were sponsored by the United Nations Fund for Population Activity (UNFPA) and Pathfinder International-Ghana, an NGO that works to improve the reproductive health of women, men and adolescents throughout the developing world.

    The treatment for one woman cost at least GH¢250.

    The women were also presented with GH¢200 each by Pathfinder, which sponsored the operations to help them undertake small scale income generating activities that would facilitate their reintegration in their various communities.

    Mr Moses L. Nanang, Reproductive Programme Manager, Pathfinder, explained that the organisation trained staff of Ghana Health Service to reach out communities to identify women with fistula and encourage them to come for treatment.


    Source: Times

  • Diabetes, hypertension prevalent among IRS staff

    Available statistics indicate that hypertension and diabetes are common among staff of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the country.

    Mr Yuruf Quainoo, National Focal Person of Tuberculosis Project, who announced this, said this was after medical examination had been conducted on them for two years.

    He was addressing participants of a two-hour health walk jointly organized by the managements of IRS, Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS) and Value Added Tax (VAT) in collaboration with the German Technical Cooperation (GTZ), AIDS Commission and TB Project.

    It was under the theme: “Revenue Maximization in a Healthy Environment.”

    The walk started from the premises of the IRS (Head Office), through ministries, National Theatre and ended at Saint Aquinas Senior High School.

    Mr Quainoo stressed the need for the excise to be organized at least quaterly because of the sedentary nature of their work, which made it difficult for them to undertake excise.

    Ms. Annie Anipa, Assistant Commissioner and Public Relations Officer of CEPS said tax collection was very important but the health of the staff collecting the taxes was most important.

    She told the participants not to wait until another health walk was organized but to continue excising and desist from taking alcoholic beverages which was not good for their health.

    The participants were tested for HIV, TB status, hypertension and diabetes.


    Source: GNA

  • Northern Ghana in need of pharmaceutical products

    Dr Daniel Ganu, a Lecturer at Valley View University has stressed the need to increase allocation of pharmaceutical products and equipments in Northern Ghana.

    He therefore, appealed to management of Partnership for Quality Medical Equipment Donations (PQMD) an international charity organisation responsible for donating medical equipments worldwide to embark on a programme to increase allocation of pharmaceuticals and medical equipments to the area.

    Dr Ganu made the call in an interview with Ghana News Agency at VVU campus at Oyibi in the Greater Accra Region.

    He said a research sponsored by management of PQMD revealed that most donations of pharmaceutical products and medical equipments were done in the southern part of the country making provision of efficient and effective health care delivery in northern Ghana difficult.

    Dr Ganu noted that about 20 per cent of medical equipment donated to health institutions broke down after few months for lack of repairs and stressed the need for efforts to remedy the situation.

    The management of PQMD launched the findings of the research project at a Fellowship Meeting attended by participants from the US Action Aid, Ghana Health Services, Local NGOs and representatives of research institutions - VVU and Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Kumasi.

    The project which began in 2007 was to evaluate medical donation practices in Ghana.

    Other objectives of the project includes providing a foundation for decision making on medical donation, foster co-operation among potential recipients and donor organisations, and identify opportunities for PQMD members to partner local organisations to collaborate appropriate medical resources and needs.


    Source: GNA

  • Professor Wiafe calls for training in Biomedical Technology

    Professor Seth Wiafe, an environmental scientist on Thursday stressed the need to train personnel in biomedical technology to specialise in medical equipment repairs in the country.

    He said most medical equipments discarded at hospitals were abandoned because of simple and repairable defects which with capacity in biomedical technology could be preserved to serve the needs of the people.

    Prof. Wiafe, a Lecturer at Loma Linda University in the US, made the call at a Fellowship Meeting at Valley View University (VVU) in Accra to launch findings of a research sponsored by Partnership for Quality Medical Equipment Donations (PQMD), an international charity organisation responsible for donating medical equipments worldwide.

    Participants were drawn from the US Action Aid, Ghana Health Services, Local NGOs and representatives of research institutions - Valley View University and Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Kumasi.

    The project which began in 2007 was to evaluate medical donation practices in Ghana.

    Other objectives of the project includes providing a foundation for decision making on medical donation, foster co-operation among potential recipients and donor organisations, and identify opportunities for PQMD members to partner local organisations to collaborate appropriate medical resources and needs.

    Prof. Wiafe said since disasters occurred without notice both developed and developing countries depended on donors for medical equipments.

    He said the idea to evaluate medical donation practice in Ghana came to him in Ethiopia when a washing machine donated to a hospital could not be utilised because certain basic gadgets to facilitate its use were not available.

    Prof. Wiafe said the project was the first in Africa and would be replicated in some other African countries, Kenya and Zambia after its success in Ghana.

    He explained that VVU and KNUST were selected to involve both private and public universities and while VVU covered the southern sector, KNUST took the northern sector of the country in the research.

    Dr Seth Laryea, President of VVU said the fellowship was an opportunity for stakeholders, donors and management of medical equipments to collaborate to solve basic health needs of the people.

    He said the project had positive impact on the two institutions as they introduced students to research methods and expressed appreciation to the managements of Johnson & Johnson, Loma Linda University and PQMD the donor institutions for their contribution.



    Source: GNA



  • Media urged to focus on health related issue

    Mr Anthony Ofori, Brong-Ahafo Regional Co-ordinator of Malaria Control Project has appealed to the media to focus on health related issues.

    He noted that if the media give the same attention to political issues as health related issues, the rate at which some diseases were spreading could have been reduced.

    Mr Ofori made the appeal in an interview with Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Sunyani on Thursday.

    He said the media was an effective tool that could help in the control of diseases like malaria.

    Mr Ofori pointed out that the development of every nation depended on the health of its people; therefore stakeholders should let the health status of Ghanaians be their major priority and advised the public to engage in basic good sanitation practices to avoid the spread of diseases.

    He said under the project a programme to help reduce malaria cases by making the environment unsuitable for mosquito breeding could help minimize malaria cases by 75 per cent by 2015.



    Source: GNA

  • Address growing autistic disorders now – Dr Badoe

    Dr Emmanuel V. Badoe, Director, Neurology Developmental Clinic, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, on Thursday called for urgent measures to address the growing number of children with autistic disorders in the country.

    He said the early childhood policy adopted by the country must seriously deal with screening children with language problems.

    Dr Badoe was speaking at a press conference organized by the Autism Awareness Care and Training (AACT) Centre and Awaawa2 Centre for Children with Communication Disorder to mark this year’s World Autism Awareness Day in Accra.

    Autism is a condition that affects some children and leaves them unable to form normal social relationships or develop normal communication. A child may become isolated from human contact and absorbed in a world of repetitive activities and interests.

    Dr Badoe said even though the cause and cure for autism were not known clues were emerging through research.

    He said records available were not adequate to give a true picture in Ghana as no large systematic studies had been conducted, but records at the Korle Bu Teaching hospital stood at a total of 67 cases seen over a three year period.

    Dr Badoe said there were a lot more cases in the communities without a formal diagnosis. He added that on the world stage, it was now believed that one out of every 500 children was on the autistic spectrum making it more common than diabetes.

    He said autistic children should be supported by the government and the private sector in terms of their special educational facilities.

    Mrs Serwah Quaynor, Founder AACT, appealed to the media to assist with the dissemination of the problem of autism disorders among children in the country.

    She said support services for children with autism were a big problem in the country.

    Mrs Quaynor said apart from the AACT Centre, Awaawaa2, and the New Horizon Special Schools there were no other specialized institutions to handle children with these disorders.


    Source: GNA

  • Major orthopaedic hospital gets morgue

    A GH¢ 240,000 ultra-modern-mortuary for the St. John of God Hospital at Duayaw-Nkwanta in Tano North District of Brong-Ahafo was commissioned on Wednesday.

    The Ministry of Health paid 30 percent of the cost of the facility whilst the hospital financed the remaining 70 percent through its internally generated fund.

    Commissioning the project, Dr. Prosper Moh, Medical Superintendent, said the hospital was in the process of being accredited as a training centre for orthopaedic and reconstructive surgery.

    He said this was the collaboration between the University Hospital of Maastricht in the Netherlands and the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital in Kumasi.

    "A mortuary with the possibility for anatomical dissection is one of the requirements for the training centre, he explained". Dr. Moh, an orthopaedic specialist, said the hospital provided health care services and specialized orthopaedic and physiotherapy services.

    It is the only orthopaedic centre for the Brong Ahafo, Northern, Upper West and Upper East regions.

    The Reverend Sister Comfort Apedzi, the Administrator, said the hospital was established in 1955, under the National Catholic Health Service, with the mission of providing high quality health care in the most effective, efficient and innovative manner.

    She said the mortuary was the most expensive project funded from the hospital's internally generated resources and commended the staff and management for their efforts and assistance towards the construction of the facility.

    Dr. Aaron Ofei, Regional Director of Health Service, said a mortuary serves as a very important facility in every health care delivery.

    He cautioned the management of the hospital to maintain and develop the facility into a centre of excellence in order not to jeopardize the health of residents near the mortuary. 02 April 09


    Source: GNA

  • Concerted efforts needed to reduce TB cases

    Dr George Sipa Yankey, Minister of Health on Tuesday called on all and sundry to join hands in preventing, controlling and curing Tuberculosis (TB) that was spreading steadily and causing loss of productivity to the country.

    He noted that despite scientific advances, the disease had staged a comeback with a vengeance, as reports indicated that the number of TB cases had been on the increase since 1995.

    “From 5,000 cases reported on the average in the 1980s, recent cases give an average of 14,000 new cases every year, “he said.

    Dr Yankey made the call in Bolgatanga when launching this year's World TB Day on the theme, "I am stopping TB", saying “stopping TB was the responsibility of every individual.”

    He said even though TB was infectious and an infected person could spread the disease to about 10 to 15 persons in a year, it could be brought under control as it could be cured and the public could help prevent its spread by encouraging infected people to seek medical help in good time.

    "Fortunately, we now possess well established methods for prevention, diagnosis and treatment, currently our treatment success rate is close to 85 per cent which is a marked improvement over what we could achieve just a decade ago," he said.

    Dr Yankey explained that the theme was a two-year campaign, aimed at involving everybody to control and cure TB.

    He said the Ministry of Health used five million dollars in 2008 and would need six million dollars this year with the hope of achieving better results.

    Dr Yankey said 1,018 TB treatment centres and 219 diagnostic centres had been established and plans were underway to put up more diagnostic centres with quality equipment to diagnose the disease throughout the country.

    He regretted that TB case detection rate was rather low, a national average of 37 per cent and appealed to traditional rulers and opinion leaders to help create awareness about the importance of seeking medical treatment, saying "as custodians of culture you can do a lot to demystify the disease which has a cure".

    Dr Joseph A. Amankwa, Director of Public Health, Ghana Health Service, said TB was predominantly a disease of poverty and low-income countries accounted for about 95 per cent of TB cases and 98 per cent of TB deaths worldwide.

    "The association between poverty and TB is well established and widespread. Impoverished communities and social groups are at higher risk of infection with the TB germ compared to the general population due to overcrowded living or working conditions, poor nutrition, co-infections and migration from or to higher risk communities", he noted.

    Controlling the disease, he said, was thus a political poverty alleviation tool, whereby eliminating extreme poverty would reduce the incidence of the disease.

    Dr Amankwa said other challenges facing TB eradication included HIV/AIDS, Multi-drug Resistant TB cases which is estimated to be 2.6 per cent in the country and stigmatisation.

    However, Dr Amankwa said the fight against TB could not be lost if a collective responsibility and commitment was put in, and urged all to help in their own ways to eliminate TB.

    He appealed to health workers to treat suspected and confirmed TB patients with compassion and empathy saying, "let us be aware that our poor attitude towards our patients will erode the very core values that guide our work".

    Dr Frank Addae Bonsu, Programme Manager, National TB Control Programme said TB was a leading killer among people suffering from HIV/AIDS and it was also a major cause of death in women of child bearing age.

    He noted that TB was a public health problem that could undermine the business community as it could take a big toll on the population and urged them to support the TB programme.

    Dr Daniel Kertesz, World Health Organisation Representative in Ghana said WHO would continue to provide support to the Tuberculosis Strategic Plan developed by the Ministry of Health for stopping TB in the country.


    Source: GNA

  • Processing centre for traditional healers

    Work on the ultra-modern processing centre for members of Ashanti Regional Branch of Ghana National Association of Traditional Healers (GNATH) being constructed at Abuakwa near Kumasi is near completion.

    The project estimated at several thousands of Ghana cedis is being funded by the association in collaboration with Speed Ghana, an NGO.

    Briefing Ghana News Agency on the project in Kumasi on Tuesday, Mr Kwame Asante-Boakye, Kumasi Metropolitan Chairman of the association, said when completed the centre would help train members on good herbal practices.

    He said the centre would train traditional healers to upgrade their knowledge in marketing, labelling and packaging of their products.

    Mr Asante-Boakye said the association had taken delivery of some equipment from India to enhance their work in addition to some machines used in producing tablets and capsules to add value to their products.

    He said herbal medicine was useful in treating some complicated diseases which orthodox medicine could not treat.

    Mr Asante-Boakye pointed out that a team of herbal medicine experts from the Netherlands would visit Ghana this year to train members of the association on modern herbal preparation, diagnosis and treatment.

    He said plans were far advanced to engage technocrats from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in the training of traditional healers to ensure they worked within the code of ethics of herbal medicine practice.

    Mr Asante-Boakye appealed to financial institutions and corporate bodies to assist the association to complete the project.



    Source: GNA

  • Mental health in crisis, only 4 doctors in public service

    The Chief Psychiatrist at the Accra Psychiatric Hospital, Dr Akwasi Osei has observed that lack of psychiatric doctors in the country has made mental health care delivery problematic.

    This is in view of the fact that at any time, between 30 and 40 per cent of the population suffers from one mental health problem or another.

    He explained that the conditions ranged from minor mental illnesses, which were easy to treat, to the major ones, which were referred to as madness.

    Dr Osei expressed these sentiments when the Daily Graphic contacted him to know more about the state of mental healthcare delivery in the country.

    That followed the disclosure by Mr Evans Oheneba Mensah, an official of BasicNeeds, that the lack of enough mental healthcare doctors in the country had, for years, prevented people with serious conditions such as schizop4renia, manic depression, serious neurosis, alcoholism and epilepsy from receiving treatment.

    Currently, Ghana has only four psychiatric doctors in the public sector, in addition to 11 others who are now on retirement but have been contracted to assist in the delivery of mental health care to the country's 22 million people.

    Two out of the four who are supposed to be in active service do not work as healthcare practitioners but as lecturers.

    Dr Osei, who confirmed that the country lacked adequate numbers of mental healthcare doctors, said, "That is why we always cry out for help."

    The chief psychiatrist explained that many people in Ghana would not want to train as mental healthcare practitioners because of the stigma attached to mental health patients which unfortunately, was usually extended to health personnel who cared for them.

    He also mentioned the lack of risk allowances that were provided elsewhere in the world to motivate people to take up, mental healthcare delivery as another reason that discouraged people from entering into that field in Ghana.

    Dr Osei, however, hinted that there were currently six students who were undergoing training at the Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons in Accra and were expected to come out between September and December this year.

    The Daily Graphic learnt about the issue of inadequate mental health doctors when a team from the Kintampo Rural Health Training School (KRHTS) and an official from the University of Winchester (UoW) in the United Kingdom (UK), called on the Minister of Health, Dr George Sipa Adjah Yankey, in his office in Accra.

    Briefing the minister on the activities of KRHTS, the Principal of the school, Dr E. T. Adjase, in the company of Professor Jane Erica of the UoW, said there were plans to upgrade the school to a university college in the near future to enable it to introduce mental health education programmes among other courses, in collaboration With the Hampshire Partnership NHS Trust (HPT) of the UK as well as the UoW.


    Source: Daily Graphic



  • Ghanaians spend millions to treat drug complications

    Ghanaians spend millions of cedis treating complications caused by usage of drugs from peddlers, the Ghana National Association of Chemical Sellers in the Western Region has noted.

    “Drug peddling has had a very negative impact on our economy both directly and indirectly,” Mr Yaw Ofosuhene, the Western Regional Secretary of association said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

    He said these drug peddlers lacked adequate knowledge on the medicine they sell and therefore ended up providing wrong doses which gave side-effects leading to various complications.

    Mr Ofusuhene further said these drug peddlers were unable to differentiate original drugs from counterfeit ones since most of their products were purchased from unapproved sources.

    He said most of the drugs handled by the peddlers were without company names, registration, location and do not have expiry dates, thereby exposing many innocent people to danger.

    Mr Ofosuhene noted that these drugs have not been certified by the Food and Drugs Board (FDB) while some were wrongly labelled.

    He said that these charlatans most often mention a whole lot of indications uses for one drug which are usually not true.

    Also, he said, the drug peddlers have a profit motive which they placed above the importance of the health of the consumer.

    He said drug peddling is an illegal activity since peddlers do not pay any form of revenue to either the district assembly or any revenue mobilization agency.

    Mr Ofosuhene said the passage of the Food and Drugs Law (PNDC LAW 305B) and the establishment of the Food and Drugs Board (FDB) were aimed to regulate the manufacture and distribution of drugs in the country.

    The Pharmacy Act (Act 489), he said, is also aimed at regulating the practice of the pharmacy profession.

    Mr Ofusuhene said several attempts made by the FDB and the Pharmacy Council to fight drug peddling has been unsuccessful.

    He called on the public to join the fight against drug peddling so as to reduce the devastating effect on the Ghanaian consumer.

    Mr Ofusuhene said the 1994 Pharmacy Act (Act 489) and the Food and Drug Law (PNDCN Law 305B), allow a police officer to arrest individuals if they suspect that they are selling counterfeit drugs, whether in a registered premises or not.


    Source: GNA


  • New district to get hospital facility

    Gomoa East, one of the newly created districts will have an ultra modern district hospital, Mr. Ekow Panyin Okyere, Member of Parliament for the area has said.

    Speaking at an open day organized by the Gomoa Obuasi community in the Central Region, said funds for the hospital had been obtained and that efforts were underway to locate a suitable place for the project.

    He said the present situation where ailments were referred to Apam, Agona Swedru and Winneba hospitals was a worry to him and some elders.

    Mr. Okyere admonished nurses to let their behaviour at their workplaces encourage patients to attend health facilities.

    “Patients must see health facilities as friendly but not a hostile place”, the MP reiterated.

    He entreated churches to operating in the area to set aside some of their revenue to support education of the needy children.

    Mr. Samuel Sosi, District Director of the Ghana Health Service, appealed to people in the area to attend health facilities and stop patronising quack doctors to seek health care.

    He mentioned lack of suitable office and residential accommodation for the staff as the greatest challenge facing his administration.

    Mr. Edmund Osei Kwakye, Gomoa West Disease Control Officer, said open days were being encouraged to open up the facilities to scrutiny by members of the public.

    “We are using open days to establish democracy within the Ghana Health Service,” he stated.

    Mrs. Theresa Aba Essel, Senior Staff Midwife in charge of the clinic, said malaria continued to be the leading disease recorded at the facility.

    Ogyedom Obrenu Kwesi Attah VI, Chief of Gomoa Afranse, appealed to husbands to support their wives during pregnancy.


    Source: GNA




     

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