Dr. Ken Sagoe, CEO, TTH |
“The chiefs are satisfied with his work. Religious
leaders have equally praised him. Talk of infrastructural development, increase
in specialists and consultants, excellent healthcare delivery and among others.
It will take a dynamic and hardworking leader like Dr. Ken Sagoe to achieve all
these and the era of we Northerners particularly Dagombas always wanting our
own people to head government institutions or departments even when they are
not qualified is over”, Spokesperson of the Concerned Youth of Tamale [CYT] has
said in reaction to an earlier press statement issued by the Concerned Citizens
Association of Tamale.
Speaking to Savannahnews during a build-up to a press briefing in Tamale
regarding a recent statement from the CCAT about the Tamale Teaching Hospital,
Spokesperson of CYT Ismael Abu minced no words in setting the records straight
for Ghanaians and for that matter, citizens of Northern Ghana to know.
He recalled
that, as far back as 2007 the CCAT allegedly connived with some hospital
officials to oust Dr. Ken Sagoe who was Chief Executive Officer of the hospital
over some disagreements.
As if that was
not enough, Mr. Abu said the same CCAT was now calling on Dr. Sagoe again to
resign from his position as CEO and also on the Minister of Health to dissolve
the Board of the Tamale Teaching Hospital.
In their press
statement, the CCAT attributed their reasons for asking Dr. Sagoe to resign his
position as CEO of the hospital and the Board dissolved due to some reported
cases of nurses stealing consumables and the most serious one being a recent case
of stolen equipment in the neurosurgical department.
TTH |
Among other
things, the CCAT also demanded that a full scale investigation into the recent
theft of equipment at the neurosurgical unit of the hospital as well as
transferring all staff who had served more than seven years. These steps the
CCAT believed would help salvage the hospital and inspire confidence among the
general public.
But in a sharp
rebuttal, the CYT Spokesperson described the position of the CCAT as one
shrouded with ulterior motives that would not benefit the entirety of most
Northerners and for that matter, residents of Tamale.
He said if
equipment were stolen in a department of the hospital, it was the head of that
particular department who should be held responsible or asked to resign from his/her
position and not the CEO and the Board.
Mr. Abu urged
the leadership of CCAT led by Alhassan Basharu Daballi to always consult the
chiefs, religious and opinion leaders of Tamale over sensitive issues bordering
on institutions and personalities heading them before going public to seek
redress saying, “We [CYT] have the support of the chiefs, religious and opinion
leaders and for that matter no one can stop us”.
According to
him, under the leadership of Dr. Sagoe, the Tamale Teaching Hospital now have
over 70 medical doctors and over 20 medical consultants/specialists who were
providing essential and unmatched healthcare services to the people of Northern
Ghana who until recently had been denied such services over the years due to
the deplorable state of the hospital.
He disclosed to
this reporter that, some of the doctors had planned to park bag and baggage and
leave their job for other opportunities elsewhere if Dr. Sagoe was forced to
resign through the influence of any selfish group or individual and so, Dr.
Sagoe was going nowhere.
Chairman, CCAT |
When contacted,
Mr. Daballi also described statements of the CYT as frivolous and said if there
was any group that had a hidden agenda it was the CYT and not the CCAT which he
was the chairman.
He emphasised
that the mere fact that equipment and other things belonging to the hospital
were regularly being stolen by some staff and nothing was done about it raised
eyebrows and cited a purported power struggle between Dr. Sagoe and some
management staff as one of the reasons why such malpractices continued to exist
since 2007 when the CCAT raised concerns over a similar circumstance.
He agreed with suggestion
by the CYT that the head of the neurosurgical unit should be questioned or
asked to resign in order to get to the bottom of the matter, but did not agree
with the fact that the CEO should not resign and the Board dissolved.
The Concerned
Youth of Tamale during their press briefing also called on the management of
the Tamale Teaching Hospital to deal ruthlessly with any staff caught stealing
equipment and consumables.
Mr. Abu who
addressed the press, noted that much bigger institutions such as the Komfo
Anokye and Korle-Bu Teaching Hospitals had more nurses and doctors [two to three
times] than the Tamale Teaching Hospital, yet the latter used more consumables
than the former, a canker he said was draining the little internally generated
revenue of the hospital.
Meanwhile, a
press statement issued and signed by the Public Relations Officer of the Tamale
Teaching Hospital Gabriel Nii Otu Ankrah to the media, said the issue of theft
at the neurosurgical unit of the hospital was currently being handled by the
Northern Regional Police Crime and Investigation Unit and the Bureau of
National Investigation.
The statement
indicated that, management of the hospital had confidence in the security
agencies and trust that a good job would be done and the perpetrators brought
to book.
No comments:
Post a Comment