Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Medical Association (GMA) has described as misleading, the content of the petition submitted by the Concerned Doctors to government to rescind the mandatory Covid-19 vaccination.
A release co-signed by the President, Dr. Frank Serebour and General Secretary of GMA, Dr. Titus Beyuo indicated that the contents of the petition are not “based on available local and international scientific data.”
“In the era of evidence-based medicine, it is unacceptable that professionals will draw such flawed conclusions based on skewed data that has not gone through the rigors of scientific proof,” a portion of the statement reads.

GMA's release comes after a group of highly specialized medical practitioners petitioned government to rescind the mandatory Covid-19 vaccination in the country.
According to the Concerned Ghanaian Doctors, there are potential dangers associated with the vaccines currently being administered in the country, hence their stance against the imposition of the Covid-19 vaccine mandate.
The petition dated January 10 stated that the vaccines do not prevent infection or spread, adding that “recent studies show that the vaccinated are becoming more relevant in the spread of COVID-19.”
“Many studies show outbreaks within fully vaccinated populations. Other studies show vaccinated populations as sources for outbreaks. Over the last few months of 2021, the assertion that these COVID vaccines reduce the risk of hospitalization and death has been shown to be inaccurate as well,” they added.
But the Ghana Medical Association has dismissed the claims raised in the petition of the Doctors.
According to GMA, the data provided in the petition of the Concerned Doctors “does not, in any way reflect the situation of COVID-19 in Ghana.”
“Data available to the GMA supports the efficacy and safety of all the COVID-19 vaccines currently registered and in use in Ghana. The evidence that vaccines reduce the incidence of critical illness. Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission and deaths globally and in Ghana, is undisputed,” GMA’s release stated.
GMA, therefore, dissociated itself from the petition of the Concerned Ghanaian Doctors to government.
The association however encouraged doctors to be guided by the available medical evidence in their public discourse and to channel all grievances through the appropriate avenues for redress though "we acknowledge that individual doctors may have concerns based on personal beliefs,"
They also urged "all persons in Ghana to avail themselves for the ongoing COVID-19 vaccination programme and continue to adhere to all the preventive protocols."
Latest Stories
-
Kumasi to go dry for 48 hours as Barekese Water Treatment Plant shuts down for critical repairs
1 hour -
Democracy without Dividends? Governance expert warns citizen apathy could endanger Ghana’s democratic future
1 hour -
Annual Flooding and Piss-Poor Leadership
1 hour -
Attack on Community 22 Polyclinic midwife sparks renewed call for safety at health facilities
2 hours -
Abu Jinapor accuses Government of diluting anti-LGBTQ bill, calls for assent to original 2024 version
2 hours -
US military says it struck Iranian drones and radar sites
3 hours -
Where is the GH¢25.3 million difference? NPP fires questions at Finance Ministry
3 hours -
The cash-in-the-sofa saga that just won’t go away for South Africa’s president
3 hours -
Unilever Ghana rewards shareholders with GH¢62.5m dividend
4 hours -
Fall in official Ebola numbers appears to be good news but it’s not that simple
4 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill, porn ID law, June floods and court case on security chiefs
5 hours -
This Saturday on Prime Insight: Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill controversy, disaster management and 2028 politics
5 hours -
Forbes declares Messi and Ronaldo both billionaires in 2026
5 hours -
Putin says there is ‘no point’ meeting Zelensky over ending Ukraine war
5 hours -
Democracy Cup: Sunderland Chairman visits Speaker of Parliament
5 hours