Cuanza Norte: President pleased with execution of General Hospital work

Angolan President of the Republic João Lourenço Saturday in Ndalatando voiced satisfaction with the level of execution of the work on General Hospital of Cuanza Norte.

The president, who visited the work, with 48 percent execution, said he received assurance from the contractor and the work supervisor that the infrastructure, estimated at USD 63 million, will be inaugurated this year.

In his speech, the Head of Executive Power underlined the role of the undertaking for the province of Cuanza Norte and for any casualties on National Road 230.

National Road 230 connects the province of Luanda to the east of the country, passing through Cuanza Norte and Malanje.

The Cuanza Norte General Hospital, whose works began in August 2021, will have 200 beds and 15 clinical services.

The new health unit will also have a hemodialysis centre, pathological anatomy, neonatology, intensive care, dentistry, psychiatry, operating room and ophthalmology services.

The hospital will also train staff in various specialties in the areas of medicine, nursing and biomedical.

The unit is being built in an area of 15,000 square meters, in Kirima locality, more than 11 kilometers from Ndalatando, the capital of Cuanza Norte province.

João Lourenço traveled through Ndalatando, the provincial capital of Cuanza Norte, on his way to the municipality of Cambambe, where he learned about the construction work for the Caculo-Cabaça Dam.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

Let’s insure our health against future emergencies

Ghanaians have been advised to insure their health for financial cushioning against future health emergencies.

‘It is very important to have an insurance surrounding health because no one can predict what the future holds regarding our health. Try and entrust your health into an insurance because it takes care of risks that are unknown.

‘In these times when money is very hard to come by, don’t wait until you are hit by any emergency. Go and get your insurance card and be sure that you’ll get the best benefits.’

Mr Robert Ofosu-Apea, Chairman of Robert Ofosu-Apea and Friends gave the advice during Phase Two of a Free National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) Registration Exercise in Accra.

It was organised and fully sponsored by Robert Ofosu-Apea and Friends, in collaboration with the National Health Insurance Authority.

Mr Ofosu-Apea said the event was put together to mitigate health expenses of community members by helping those who for some reasons, found it difficult to register or renew their NHIS cards.

He added the huge patronage of the Phase One, informed his decision to put together the second Phase to benefit about 800 people from neighbouring communities.

Mr Ofosu-Apea said he and his team had organised free extra classes for Senior High School students on vacation, adding that, he had plans of putting together other programmes to improve living conditions of community members.

He thanked his friends and partners for the assistance so far and urged the community to embrace all other activities he would put together for them in future.

Mr James Agban and Madam Mary Danyipe, both beneficiaries of the exercise thanked Mr Ofosu-Apea for the kind gesture and urged others to emulate.

They advised Ghanaians to take advantage of the exercise to either get a new card or renew their old one.

‘Until my card got missing, I used to benefit from it anytime I went to the hospital. I did not pay any money except for drugs not available at the hospital or not covered by the insurance. I advise Ghanaians to take their NHIA card registration and renewal seriously because it proves helpful in critical times,’Madam Danyipe said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

A stitch in time saves nine – A case for public health financing in Ghana

It was 11: 30 pm in the middle of a rainy night when young Alhassan who lives with his family at Kpatinga, a village in Gushegu in the Northern region started experiencing a high fever with a runny nose.

Fatima, the mother of Alhassan gave his four-year-old boy paracetamol and placed a wet towel on his son’s forehead and feet hoping to keep the fever under control but the situation worsened as the clock ticked.

As time went by, deep into the night, Alhassan’s body became extremely hot, he began to cough, and his eyes became watery as he coughed severely.

Let us rush him to the hospital, Alhassan’s father exclaimed in a faint voice while his wife Famita gazed at his son helplessly.

At a high speed, Alhassan’s father drove him to the Gushegu District hospital. After several tests and examinations by the doctor, Alhassan was diagnosed with measles.

Four-year-old Alhassan was due to take a second shot of his measles vaccine in January 2023 but a nurse on duty says there was a shortage of measles vaccines and other vaccines for childhood immunization in the hospital in the last six months.

Like young Alhassan, many children are left to their fate when there is a shortage of vaccines for routine childhood immunizations.

The situation often leads to disease outbreaks and public health emergencies when there are no timely interventions.

In 2022 for instance, the shortage of the Measles-Rubella (MR) vaccine for almost six months in public health facilities across the country lead to an outbreak of measles in some parts of the Northern Region where about 120 children were affected.

Ghana has over the years experienced vaccine shortages intermittently its inability to fulfil its financial obligations for the procurement of vaccines, late placement, and payment of vaccine orders due to financial constraints and the absence of a dedicated source of funding for public health issues of such nature.

The nation would not have to rely on development partners for help to attend to internal outbreaks if there is a designated fund for unplanned outbreaks.

In the wake of the vaccine shortage in 2022 which extended to February this year, a source from the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that Ghana could not fulfil its co-financing obligations for 2022 covering all vaccine needs until February 2023.

Stakeholders in the health sector admit that Ghana’s delay in fulfilling its financial obligations to GAVI also contributed to the shortage of vaccines.

GAVI said Ghana has been encouraged to meet its financial obligations for 2023 on time early in the year by July 2023 to avoid delays in the delivery of the vaccines for this year.

Dr Anthony Nsiah Asare, Presidential Advisor on Health in an interview with the GNA explains that vaccine shortage happens when the country is unable to pay for its vaccines on time.

To him, it is time Ghana gets a fund to fall on in cases of an emergency like the shortage of vaccines and the COVID-19 pandemic.

‘We were all caught unaware when the pandemic struck and setting up an emergency preparedness fund is a requirement by the International Health Regulations (IHR) that we need to fulfil as a country,’ he said.

The Presidential Advisor on Health says the government is considering the establishment of a Public Health Emergency Fund (PHEF) to solicit inflows from companies and organisations with much focus on the extractive industries.

‘This will ensure that we have a system in place which we can easily fall on before we start going to ask for loans and support from other places during pandemics or epidemics,’ he indicated.

Article 851 of the Public Health Act 2012 entreats Ghana to establish, operate and maintain a national public health emergency response plan.

Dr Nsiah- Asare suggests that the COVID-19 Trust Fund be converted into a Public Health Emergency Fund.

He called on individuals, organisations, government, and corporate institutions to donate money into the fund when established, saying, ‘If we do this, we will not have to rush to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to address the situations next we are faced with unforeseen disease outbreaks.’

Betty Nana Efua Krosby Mensah Member of Parliament for Afram Plains North and a member of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Health says the establishment of a Public Health Emergency Fund was long overdue.

‘As a country, not too long ago, we experienced an Ebola scare where our leaders had to rush around looking for funding to establish isolation centres to prepare,’ she said.

Madam Mensah said Ghana needed a Public Health Emergency Fund, not to only fund pandemics, but also to prepare for other health emergencies.

She said her constituency, Afram Plain North, for instance, had a tough time looking for a place to admit people who got infected during the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

‘The government should be able to mount a robust response to fight public health epidemics quickly,’ she said.

Ghana’s 2022-2025 Medium Term Development Plan calls for the enforcement of the Public Health Act, ensuring the establishment of a Health Emergency Fund; and strengthening the Ghana Centre for Diseases Control and other disease control centres across the country.

The plan also calls for the Passage of the Health bill, which includes the emergency preparedness and response plan into law and made operational by 2023.

Ghana needs to urgently establish a Public Health Emergency Fund to increase the country’s readiness and preparedness in responding to disease outbreaks.

A PHEF, when established, would serve as a source of funding for the health sector and could contribute to quality healthcare delivery for every Ghanaian.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Commonwealth conference in Seychelles addresses illicit financial flows and corruption in Africa

It is estimated that Africa loses more than $50 billion per year to illicit financial flows, the Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Baroness Patricia Scotland, said at the opening of a regional conference for heads of anti-corruption agencies in Africa being hosted by Seychelles.

Scotland is urging the countries attending to take stock in order to take appropriate actions to fight corruption.

The three-day conference, which kicked off on Monday at the Savoy Resort, is being attended by representatives from Botswana, The Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mauritius, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia.

Speaking at the opening, Seychelles’ President Wavel Ramkalawan said that “corruption is not only about bribes. […] People are hurt when resources are wasted or diverted which is why it is so important to understand the different kinds of corruption that infect our society and develop smart responses.”

Meanwhile, the head of the Anti-Corruption Commission of Seychelles (ACCS), May de Silva ,said that Seychelles is especially concerned about cyber security and how it keeps its data safe in its institutions.

“We will share this with our colleagues as well as invite our partners in the region to share the services of our digital forensic labs,” she said.

According to the UN, corruption costs the global economy $3.6 trillion each year. Over the last 50 years, it is estimated that Africa has lost more than $1 trillion to corruption, equivalent to all the official development assistance received during the same period.

Faced with such large sums, the ACCS says that while dealing with corruption cases takes time, it has to “let the process play out. We believe that we have to follow them. We are encouraged that as we are going through the process, we can retain ill-gotten gains that have been stolen from the country, and this is for anyone who we are investigating.”

To note, Seychelles, an island state with a little over 100,000 inhabitants, has one ongoing case of the disappearance of $50 million dollars, gifted to the island nation by UAE in 2002, before the Supreme Court.

In the last Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Kigali, Rwanda, participants in a communiqué asked the Commonwealth Secretary General and the government of Rwanda to include anti-corruption measures as agenda priorities. These include prioritisation of the recovery of proceeds of crimes, artefacts, and illicit financial flows out of Africa as part of the resolutions of the meeting.

The conference has been held annually since its inception in 2011, gathering the various heads to discuss and implement ways to tackle corruption.

It provides “an opportunity for Heads of Anti-Corruption Agencies to collaborate and advance progress towards strengthening anti-corruption institutions across Commonwealth Africa to achieve SDG 16,” explained the organisation’s head of public sector governance, Dr Roger Koranteng.

He said that “SDG 16 goals have been tailored to look at specific targets to tackle corruption.”

Following Friday’s meeting, Seychelles expects to reinforce partnerships it has in the region.

At the moment various organisations have agreements that allow for police-to-police exchanges and legal frameworks that let them share information.

Source: Seychelles News Agency

Cameroonian children face resurgence of Incurable diseases

Statistics published by the Ministry of Public Health indicate that the epidemiological situation of measles in Cameroon is beginning to call for concern.

“Of the 200 Health Districts in Cameroon, 100 are in measles epidemic, with 4,677 cases and 18 deaths. A situation which can be explained by insufficient vaccination coverage for several years, the growing number of unvaccinated children resulting, in part, from the vaccine hesitation amplified by Covid-19.” Revealed MINSANTE.

In a come together in the Ebolowa-South region recently, health stakeholders advanced the risks involved in nursing measles and the rubella epidemics at this point in time.

“Note that measles remains a very contagious serious viral disease which manifests itself by rashes, watery eyes, and fever. Although rubella and measles have similar symptoms, no treatment is currently available. The only means of prevention is vaccination.” Stressed a health expert.

To avoid crossing the red line, the health warriors are preparing for a national vaccination campaign in Cameroon against the measles and rubella epidemics starting from June 28 to July 2, 2023.

“During this operation, children from 09 months to 5 years will be injected in the shoulder, in hospitals and all places of regrouping (including localities with difficult access, refugee camps, nomadic camps).” The health team disclosed.

The national vaccination campaign has been organized by the Expanded Vaccination Program (EPI) and the Cameroon Red Cross. According to them, groundwork plans are being intensified for smooth and effective vaccination across Cameroon, in a bit to curb the spread of measles and rubella.

Nevertheless, the population (especially parents) is implored to collaborate with the health teams for the sake of their children.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Health minister praises role of nurses

Angolan minister of Health Sílvia Lutucuta recognised Friday the dedication and commitment of nurses, which she described as crucial for national health system.

In a message, ahead of the International Nurses Day on Friday, the minister said that these professionals play an essential role in the day-to-day of the sector.

She referred that the date, celebrated in honour of the birth of Florence Nightingale, mother of modern nursing, offers an important opportunity to recognise how fundamental the role that these professionals play is, observing its Code of Ethics and Deontology.

Sílvia Lutucuta underlined that they are always concerned with the development of their technical skills, social awareness and love for others.

She said that this year, the Nurse’s Day is marked in a special way, at a time when the world celebrates the success of international coordination, with the end of the COVID-19 emergency, moving to a long-term management transition.

“On this occasion, we pay a simple tribute to all the professionals who perished in the fight against COVID-19, which included all health professionals”, she expressed.

The Ministry of Health has defined the repositioning of primary health care, including community health, as one of the key priorities for accelerating access to quality health care.

The minister stated that the role of nurses is fundamental in this equation since, on many occasions, they are the first – and only – health professionals that a patient has access to.

Currently, the Nursing class represents 49.03% of the health workforce.

In the last two public tenders, 2018 and 2019, 21,151 nursing professionals were admitted throughout the country and subsidies for additional hours were implemented for the class.

Sílvia Lutucuta announced that 1,123 nursing technicians in priority specialties are completing post-medium training and that postgraduate nursing specialisation courses will begin shortly.

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Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)