
Audio By Carbonatix
Forty-nine health workers from various health facilities in the Central Region are undergoing a three-week sign language course at the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital (CCTH).
The participants, including doctors, nurses, laboratory technicians, administrative staff, midwives and some teachers from nursing training institutions are being trained in basic sign language to enable them to offer quality services to clients with speech challenges.
The Public Relations Officer of the CCTH, Mr Frederick Nyankah, told the Daily Graphic that the course was to help equip the employees to break the language barriers for clients with speech challenges to be able to serve them better.
He said currently, the CCTH had only one nurse who could communicate effectively in the sign language.
This, he noted, posed a great challenge to delivering services to clients with speech challenges.
“Even when she is off duty, she has to be called to work because she is the only person who can effectively sign,” he stated.
He said the course was to get many more paramedics to be able to communicate with clients and ensure that the right services were given them.
Crucial tool
Mr Nyankah said communication remained a crucial tool in effective health care, adding that the course was a step towards achieving satisfactory health service delivery for all.
A beneficiary of the course, Dr Jennifer Kwawukume, said it was important that the care giver and clients communicated without barriers to ensure improved delivery of services.
She said the training was commendable and would ensure that healthcare providers freely communicated with all.
Barrier
The Director of Programmes at Supreme Sign, Mr Isaac Ofori, who is in charge of the training programme, said as long as there were communication barriers, persons with speech challenges could not be helped.
He commended the hospital for the initiative and said the participants were picking the sign language very fast.
Latest Stories
-
When Hormuz Fails: The day a waterway stops the world
56 seconds -
Ghanaian students in UK to protest over unpaid fees, stipends
1 minute -
Inflation to go up marginally in April 2026 – Report
3 minutes -
Newborn baby found abandoned at Kronkromase cemetery, residents in shock
4 minutes -
VIP Jeoun Transport increases fares effective April 8
7 minutes -
Minority warns against alleged LGBTQ provisions in constitutional review
12 minutes -
Wave of violence kills at least 26 in Nigeria as army thwarts mass church abduction
30 minutes -
Anti-LGBTQ+: Mahama must be held to account to fulfil his promise – Ntim Fordjour
31 minutes -
Latvian businessman Aldis Ozols enstooled as development Chief of Supresu-Man
42 minutes -
‘We should go in for the best’ – Ernest Thompson on next Black Stars coach
46 minutes -
US, Iran receive 45-day ceasefire proposal as Trump deadline to reopen Strait of Hormuz looms
59 minutes -
Iran defiant as Trump vows ‘entire country’ could be taken out if no deal reached by tonight
1 hour -
Afigya Kwabre North crowned champions of maiden MTN Ashantifest Regional U17 football competition
1 hour -
The case for an explicit and limited Legal threshold for internal military deployment in Ghana
1 hour -
UK Wireless Festival sponsorship withdrawals highlight high cost of Kanye West controversy for global brands
1 hour