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Guinea worm likely to be eradicated next year - Veep
10836 Views Posted on 03-Aug-2010 under Health
Ghana is on the verge of eradicating guinea worm next year, Vice President John Dramani Mahama has announced in Wa.
He said Ghana has recorded
only eight reported cases of the disease as at June this year and described the achievement as good news for the country.
He therefore urged
all to adhere to the practices that could help in the total eradication of the guinea worm next year.
Vice President Mahama announced this when
he officially launched "The Ghana 8 Number Hospitals Project and cut sod for the construction and equipping of a new 160 bed Upper West Regional
Hospital in Wa on Saturday.
The Ghana 8 Number Hospitals Project would cost 339 million dollars with a grant element of 36.63 per cent from
Euroget De-Invest S.A. of Egypt.
Under the project two regional hospitals, one in the Upper West and the other in Ashanti, as well as six
district hospitals would be provided in some regions of the country.
Vice President Mahama said the strategic objective of the project is to
create, expand and upgrade capabilities in the health system to fill the service gaps.
Secondly, he said it is also to improve clinical and
organizational performance to promote, protect and improve healthcare delivery.
Vice President Mahama said it is expected that the project
would address some of the growing health needs of both rural and urban centres, address National Health Insurance Scheme demands, and improve health
related millennium development goals with focus on maternal and child health.
He announced that five more Polyclinics would be established in
the Upper West Region to provide quality health care services to the people.
Vice President Mahama also announced that the Savannah Accelerated
Development Authority's (SADA) Bill had been passed by Parliament and that government was prepared to commit resource for the development of a new
road from Wa-Walewale to open up the area to trade and other economic activities.
He commended health workers in the region for working hard
under some serious challenges to provide quality healthcare service to the people and urged them to continue with their good work.
Dr. Benjamin
Kunbuor, Minister of Health said government was committed to improve quality health care services in such a way that people in both rural and urban
centres would have access to equal health care delivery.
He said government was concerned about the deplorable state of some health facilities
and was doing everything possible to improve on them soon to enhance healthcare delivery for all.
Dr Kunbuor announced that the Ministry has
initiated a policy and plan to complete all uncompleted and abandoned projects in the health sector, aimed to move service delivery to higher
level.
He said the Ministry had valued all those uncompleted projects and was working hard to secure a loan to complete them to help increase
the coverage and quality of health services for the people to create wealth.
Dr Kunbuor announced that the Ministry of Health in collaboration
with the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development as well as the Better Ghana Management Services had initiated a programme to train more
than 2,000 Health Promotion Assistants to support educate and create awareness on healthy lifestyle and healthy choices.
The programme would be
launched in this August, 2010, after which selected unemployed Environmental Health graduates and Senior High School graduates would be trained to
become Health Promotion Assistants.
These Assistants would work with community structures to improve sanitation, personal hygiene and diseases
prevention in schools, market places, work places and in the communities, to help reduce disease burden so as to make the health insurance scheme more
sustainable.
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