WHO to assist Ghana in integrating traditional medicine into mainstream healthcare

The World Health Organisation (WHO) remains committed to assisting the Government of Ghana in sustainably integrating traditional medicine into mainstream healthcare toward universal health coverage. Professor Francis Kasolo, the WHO Country Representative to Ghana said the Organisation believed that the promotion of the herbal industry would position Ghana to harness its naturally endowed fortunes of rich and unique biodiversity of aromatic and medicinal plants for the desired economic transformation. ‘WHO would continue to provide assistance, tools, guidelines, assist with capacity building, and leverage our existing networks and practices to promote collaboration and expertise to improve the integration and access to Traditional Medicine (TRM) products and services,’ Prof Kasolo said his keynote address at the occasion of the second Centre for Plant Medicine Research (CPMR) Oku Ampofo Memorial (COAM) International Conference in Accra. The conference, which was on the theme ‘Sustainable and safe Integrative Healthcare towards Universal Health Coverage and Economic Transformation’, was organised by CPMR in collaboration with the Ghana Federation of Traditional Medicine Practitioners Association (GHAFTRAM), and attracted participants from across sub-Saharan Africa. Prof Kasolo said the timing of the conference was also appropriate, as this year marks the conclusion of the plans of action that were approved by heads of state and government 20 years ago to implement Traditional Medicine activities. ‘We therefore need to reflect on where we are coming from, where we are and what the future holds in the area of traditional medicine’. He said African traditional medicine had played a vital healthcare role in many African communities; adding that it draws on Africa’s rich and unique biodiversity of aromatic and medicinal plants. He said accessibility, availability, affordability, cultural acceptance as well as spiritual, religious, and sociological values make them a preferred option for many people. ‘Still today, 80 per cent of the African continent’s population rely on traditional medicine for their basic health needs,’ he said. ‘In Ghana, it is estimated that between 60 – 70 per cent of patients depend on traditional medicine for their healthcare needs.’ He lauded Ghana’s Ministry of Health for continuously taking leadership in the regulation and capacity-building of Traditional medicine practitioners for improved service delivery. He said the WHO recognises that Traditional Medicine practitioners are an important stakeholder in the healthcare delivery system and therefore encourages the continuous strengthening of their capacity, especially at the primary healthcare level. He said the WHO encourages Ghana to systematically include traditional medicine products in other health-related training programmes to complement the efforts of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, which has been training Herbal Medicine practitioners since 2001. ‘We also encourage that practice of traditional medicine continues to be linked to an existing network of facilities and the practitioners be equipped with the ability to refer seriously ill clients to referral facilities with expertise in orthodox and alternative medical care.’ The Country Representative said in relation to research, there were 34 institutes in the African Region dedicated to traditional medicines research and development, one of which was Ghana’s Centre CPMR. Adding the CPMR has promoted research and development of traditional medicines and has collaborated with traditional health practitioners since the mid-1970s. Prof Kasolo said studies had shown that the herbal medicine industry was one of the fastest-growing industries in the world with a projected market value of $177.65 billion by 2029. He noted that due to the significantly substantial number of people that were involved in the value chain of the herbal medicine industry, it was deemed a major source of employment in Ghana. Madam Tina Gifty Naa Ayeley Mensah, a Deputy Minister of Health, said healthcare should not be seen as a cost and that it represents an investment in the nation’s future. Prof Alex Asase, Executive Director, CPMR, said the Centre had so far developed 37 herbal products for the management of both communicable and non-communicable diseases through its scientific research and development programs. He reiterated the need for adequate resourcing of the Centre to enable it to deliver on its mandate. Nana Kobena Nketsia V, Omanhen of Essikado Traditional Area, who chaired the occasion, urged Africans to take charge of their own healthcare delivery system.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Obuasi becoming the hub of quality healthcare in Ashanti Region -MCE

Mr Elijah Adansi-Bonah, the Municipal Chief Executive for Obuasi believes the Municipality will soon become the hub of quality healthcare in the Ashanti Region with the rapid investment in health infrastructure by AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi Mine. He said the Municipality had seen massive infrastructural development in the health sector under the 10-year Socio-Economic Development Plan (SEDP) of the Obuasi Mine which was complementing efforts of the Government to make quality healthcare accessible to the citizenry. The MCE who was speaking at a groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of a Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) compound at Apitikooko, said Obuasi would come only next to Kumasi upon the completion of various projects in the Municipality. The GHC 3.5 million project which is scheduled to be completed in seven months, would provide pre- and post-natal services, child welfare services and general outpatient care for residents to ensure accessible healthcare. Mr Adansi-Bonnah said with the construction of the trauma hospital, the upgrading of the Obuasi Government Hospital by the central government and the provision of CHPS compounds and clinics by the Mine, the health needs of the people of Obuasi would be adequately catered for. He said investment in the health and education sectors of the Municipality would help diversify the local economy because the quality of services in those sectors would attract people with varied backgrounds to the area. He commended AngloGold Ashanti for complementing the efforts of the Assembly to accelerate the development of the Municipality and pledged the Assembly’s commitment to create the enabling environment for their business to thrive. Mr Eric Broni, Senior Manager of Engineering at AngloGold Ashanti, said the Mine believed that investing in the well-being of communities it operated in was paramount. ‘The project demonstrates our commitment to sustainable development and making a positive impact on the lives of the people residing in these areas. We envision the CHPS compound becoming a pillar of support for residents, providing them with the necessary quality healthcare services and fostering a healthier and happier community,’ he noted. AngloGold Ashanti, according to him, remained steadfast in its commitment to implementing the 10-year SEDP to improve social development in Obuasi and contribute to resilient and self-sustaining communities. The project is being executed by Bodtech Company Limited, an Obuasi-based firm in line with AngloGold Ashanti’s local content policy.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Mahama takes #BuildingGhanaTour campaign to TUC

Former President John Dramani Mahama, the standard-bearer of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), on Tuesday took his #BuildingGhanaTour campaign to the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in Accra. The former President, who was accompanied by Mr Johnson Asiedu Nketia, the National Chairman of the NDC; Dr Cassiel Ato Baah Forson, the NDC Minority Leader in Parliament and Professor Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang, the NDC Running Mate in the 2020 general election was received by Dr Anthony Yaw Baah, Secretary-General, TUC. Former President Mahama said as social democrats, the NDC believed in social justice and equity and shared a common objective with organised labour represented by the TUC. ‘We both prioritise the welfare and wellbeing of the working class and ordinary people. This shared goal requires us to cooperate and collaborate to ensure the total achievement of our objectives,’ he stated. He reiterated that the NDC and the TUC were allies. The former President said the history of global development showed that trade unions had been instrumental in shaping economies to promote universal human well-being. He said the progress made in the Western world and other advanced economies was a testament to the tenacity of and resilience of workers unions. He noted that the interaction between the NDC and the TUC was a mark of even deeper relations to safeguard their common interest and ensure a better future for the working people of the country. He said just as no economy could survive without prioritising the well-being of workers, the NDC as social democrats recognised the need to design policies that accommodate the growth of industry and business and at the same time protect the interest of workers and their unions. ‘The NDC, which I lead, recognises that it does not have the monopoly of ideas and that it takes the cross-fertilisation of ideas to achieve and sustain the economic progress of our country,’ he said. He said the Party acknowledged the pool of ideas and expertise at the disposal of the TUC and recognised that the TUC had clear perspectives of the challenges confronting the country in this era as evidenced in their workers’ manifesto. He said as allies whose anchor ideology in social democracy, the NDC had no hesitation in inviting the TUC to actively participate in their strategy formulation processes; so that the concerns of the workers and the vulnerable could be adequately reflected in policy whenever they took over the reins of Government. Former President Mahama said no political party in Ghana was better aligned to pursue policies favourable to the working class than the NDC. ‘We firmly and ably ascribe to the tenets of social democracy, believing that the state and the market can work together to ensure economic expansion and equitably sharing of the fruits of economic growth,’ he said. ‘We understand that our collective wellbeing as citizens resides in sustained economic growth through high productivity in sectors where we have a comparative advantage.’ He said the NDC welcomed any opportunity to engage organised labour in the pursuit of these objectives continuously. He said Ghana had been hit very hard by very harsh economic conditions over the last couple of years; declaring that under the current administration, Ghana had witnessed severe adverse effects due to what they in the NDC and many Ghanaians consider a self-inflicted economic crisis. He cited the high inflation rates, high cost of living, destruction of jobs, debt crisis, and negative impact from investors were some of the effects of the current administration’s failed policies. Former President Mahama said the economic crisis had significantly impacted workers and citizens generally. He said unemployment rates, particularly among young people, had risen to the highest in recent memory, making it difficult for many to find stable and decent-paying jobs. He said inflation and exchange rate volatility had eroded workers’ purchasing power and had pushed many below the poverty line. Former President Mahama said the healthcare and education sectors had also been negatively affected by inadequate funding and deteriorating quality of services. Dr Anthony Yaw Baah, Secretary-General, TUC, presented a copy of the TUC’s Workers’ Manifesto to the former President for input in the drafting of the NDC’s 2024 Manifesto.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Ghana Industrialisation Week in the offing

The Ghana Industrialisation Week, a pillar in attaining the continent’s economic growth and development goals as articulated in Agenda 2030 and Agenda 2063, comes off early next year. The Ghana Industrialisation Week 2024 is expected to host more than 550 exhibitors, some international speakers, over 35,000 industry professionals and 4,000 international delegates from more than 120 countries, to discuss Ghana’s pioneering approach towards diversifying its Industrialisation mix. Mr Jedidiah Aryeepah, CEO of Topside Energy Limited, told the Ghana News Agency in an interview that the Week would start from April 24 to 26, 2024 in Accra. He explained that the Week would showcase Ghana’s achievement as a catalyst for global economic growth with billions of dollars of investment opportunities to facilitate Ghana’s Industrialisation transition and achieve its net-zero goals. The Week would again draw more policymakers, business leaders and Trade and industry, as well as energy experts to uncover new opportunities and strengthen partnerships. Mr Aryeepah said, ‘In light of the key and strategic interdependences between Industrialization and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the Ghana Industrialisation Week would rally desired political momentum, resources, partnerships and alliances towards structural transformation, leverage on Africa’s rich and diverse natural resources, and embrace current advances in technologies, and geo socio-political trends and emergence of tradeable services. He said the Week would unlock the evolution of a vibrant Pan-African enterprise and capital base that would unleash an inclusive and sustainable industrialization pathway that carried along all economic agents, including SMEs, youth, and women.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Play-based teaching and learning best approach to educate children

The Reverend John Ntim Fordjour, a Deputy Minister of Education, says the new educational curriculum’s play-based teaching and learning is the best approach to teaching children in kindergarten. He explained that the strategy allowed children to learn while playing and opened them up to creative and imaginative learning, which helped them cope with whatever they were being taught. The Deputy Minister made these remarks when he paid visits to two schools in the Akuapem North Municipality that had commenced the play-based teaching model in their kindergarten classes. He visited the Obosomase Methodist Basic School and Mamfe Presbyterian Basic School both in the Akuapem North Municipality. Play-based education is a form of competence-based training where teaching and learning are done through indoor and outdoor play and audio-visuals. The teachers guide and instruct the children in play-based indoor and outdoor learning environments to capture their interests, strengths, and abilities. Mr Fordjour hinted that the Ministry of Education had plans to roll out this approach across all kindergartens in the country. ‘After years of testing, piloting and replicating, plans are being developed to roll out play-based kindergarten training nationally so that every child can receive quality early years education,’ he added. Mr Fordjour said the ministry would be offering training to kindergarten teachers in all 261 districts in the curriculum. He urged the teachers to continue to use a positive approach to manage the children’s behaviour in class. Madam Patricia Nyampong, Early Childhood Coordinator, Akuapem North Municipal Education Directorate, said the teaching approach had increased the learning abilities and outcomes of the kindergarten children in the two schools. She said the children were always eager to come to school since they would be able to play and learn.

Source: Ghana News Agency