Health Minister, Alban Bagbin |
THE MINISTER of
Health, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin has warned that it was becoming
increasingly unacceptable for Ghana to continue to lose more women through
child delivery as a result of the rude and unprofessional conduct of some
health personnel at the various health facilities in the country.
According to Mr.
Bagbin, he could not comprehend why well motivated, professionally trained and
experienced health personnel provided with all the necessary tools and
logistics and as well, operating from standardized health facilities, could
still jeopardize the lives of pregnant women.
Addressing a number of
senior health staff in Tamale during his ongoing familiarization tour of the
northern region, the Health Minister passionately threatened to lead a crusade
or instigate the various women advocates and other individual Ghanaians to begin
to institute legal actions against reckless health personnel and institutions
in order to curtail the incidence of maternal mortalities in the country.
The Northern Region alone between 2011 and
the first half of 2012 (January to June) recorded as high as 200 maternal
deaths. A total number of 130 women died in 2011 and 70 deaths in the first
half of 2012, which is an indication that the region is fast losing the fight
against the maternal mortality.
Sadly, 56 of the women who died in 2012
representing 86.2% were between the ages of 20-34 years, three (3) of them
representing 4.6% were also between 15 and 19 years followed by 6 representing
9.2% for the age groups of 35+ years.
Out of 70 women who died between January
and June 2012, 65 were institutional and 5 community deaths. Besides, out of a
total of 65 institutional maternal deaths, 32 (49.2%) deaths occurred at the
Tamale Teaching Hospital, 6 (9.2%) from Yendi, 5 (7.7%) from West Mamprusi, 4
(6.2%) from Bole and Gushegu Districts, 3 (4.6%) from East Mamprusi, 2 (3.8%)
each from Zabzugu-Tatale, East Gonja, Tolon Kumbungu and Savelugu-Nanton
Districts. Chereponi, Karaga and Saboba Districts recorded 1(1.9%) death each.
Even though the Northern Regional Health Director, Dr. Akwasi
Twumasi had attributed the causes of maternal mortality in the region to the
insufficient number of midwives and other critical health personnel coupled
with inadequate health facilities and bad road networks resulting in
unnecessary delays in transferring pregnant women to other deserving centres
for proper attention, the Health Minister, Alban Bagbin held almost a contrary
view as he openly blame the situation on the behavior of some of the personnel.
“We have had reports of some doctors
negligently leaving scissors and other surgical tools in the wombs of women and
stitching the opening together. We have also received reports of nurses and
midwives refusing to attend to agonizing women in labour leading to undue
delays, excessive bleeding and deaths. Some of you (health personnel) are also
accused of beating women in labour and subjecting them to all sorts of
intimidations which continue to endanger the lives of most of our women at the
labour wards. So how can you convince me that the fault is not from us, when government
on its part has provided the best of facilities in Tamale, Yendi, Gushegu,
Karaga, Zabzugu-Tatale and other areas but yet that is where most of the deaths
are recorded?
The Minister further stated that he would
soon organize a press conference to inform Ghanaians as to why some of these
irresponsible or ill-behaved health personnel should not go unpunished or face
the harshness of the law.
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