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Health News of Tuesday, 5 December 2006

Source: GNA

Dormaa Hospital Celebrates Golden Jubilee

Dormaa-Ahenkro (B/A) Dec. 5, GNA - The President of the Dormaa Traditional Council, Osagyefo Oseadeyo Agyemang Badu II has cut the sod at Dormaa-Ahenkro to commence the construction of a multi-million cedi eye clinic for the Dormaa Presbyterian Hospital.

The sod cutting ceremony was held to climax a grand durbar held by the chiefs of Dormaa and the Presbyterian Health Services to commemorate the hospital's Golden Jubilee.

The Dormaa Traditional Council donated A230,000,000.00 and pledged further support in cash and communal labour towards the project. Dr. Bert Groaneweg of Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Holland also donated an amount of 105,000,000 cedis on behalf of Dormaa hospital's foreign partners towards the project.

In a speech read for him, the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana, Rt. Rev. Dr. Yaw Frimpong-Manso challenged the church to establish measures aimed at addressing the increasing incidence of preventable health hazards in society. He noted that health problems in developing counties hover around social, economic and environmental situations such as poor education opportunities, scarcity of health and related care, lack of resources and inequality in wealth distribution.

The Moderator recommended the setting up of pragmatic mechanisms aimed at cushioning the harsh effects of these problems and making life more meaningful to the ordinary man.

He called on membership of the church to actively involve in national programmes designed to check the spread of the HIV infection in the country so as to hedge the productive youth against the menace. Rt. Rev. Dr. Frimpong-Manso called for whole-hearted compassion towards people living with HIV, saying such people still deserved to be upheld as God's creation and given the necessary hope, mercy, goodness, forgiveness and reconciliation.

Dr. David Agyapong, Acting General Manager of the hospital announced that the hospital began in 1955 with Dr. Emmy Ode, a Dutch female as the first substantive medical doctor.

Dr. Agyapong expressed concern that malaria still remains the dominant cause of outpatient attendance and admissions to the hospital accounting for 23.5 per cent of all cases.

He said since the successful implementation of the national Health Insurance Scheme in the district, outpatient attendance has tripled while in-patient admissions have also dropped by two per cent. He explained that because health care has become easily accessible patients no longer wait for their conditions to deteriorate before being rushed to the hospital and this has positively impacted on the general status of health in the district.

Dr. Agyapong mentioned acute shortage of staff, insufficient staff accommodation and inadequate power supply to the hospital's equipment as some of the numerous debilitating problems confronting the hospital. Osagyefo Oseadeyo Agyemang Badu II who chaired the function commended the Presbyterian Church for drawing basic health care services to the doorstep of people in the area.

Past and present staff, who distinguished themselves in the discharge of their duty were awarded cash prizes, trophies and certificates of merit. 05 Dec. 06