Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Ophthalmic Nurses Society (GONS) wants the government to grant members licences to operate private eye centres.
President, Mark Adjei-Gyamfi believes it is crucial in ensuring access to primary eye care and parity among the various eye care professionals in the country.
He said this at the 10th Biennial Conference and Workshop at Ejisu, under the theme: Ophthalmic Nurses: A Voice to lead in the Universal Eye Health Coverage: Respect our Right to Private Practice.
“We would like to appeal to MOH, HeFRA and any other agencies concerned to expedite action on ensuring that Ophthalmic Nurses who wish to operate private eye centers are given the license as pertains to other eye care professionals,” he said.
Mr. Adjei-Gyamfi observes the lack of job description has hindered the career progression of members.
“We are appealing to GHS and MOH as a matter of urgency to implement the newly prepared job description for the Ophthalmic Nurses so that the job grade from Ophthalmic Nurse, up to the last job grade of Chief Ophthalmic Nurse, is put on the payroll or pay slip of members of the society.
“This is because our members have qualified to be appointed to the Deputy Chief grade but because our job description has not been implemented, such members are marking time on the principal grade,” he said.
Sponsorship packages for members pursuing specialist training at the Ghana College of Nurses and Midwives and provision of the needed logistics and equipment were also expressed by the Association.
The Ophthalmological Society of Ghana lent their support to the Association’s request but called for enhanced regulation to ensure best practices.
The Treasurer of the Ophthalmological Society of Ghana, Dr. Esinam Ayisi-Boateng called for effective monitoring. “It is my belief if excellent monitoring and supervision is done for all private practitioners so that practitioners stay within their scope of service, this request should not be denied,” he urged.
Latest Stories
-
Jill Biden says she thought husband was having a stroke during 2024 debate
22 seconds -
Countries tighten travel rules as Ebola risk rises
4 minutes -
Gold hits two-month low as US-Iran tension stokes inflation fears
7 minutes -
Toyota sales drop for third month on declines in China, Middle East
10 minutes -
Trump refiles $10bn defamation suit against WSJ over report on Epstein ties
18 minutes -
Kenya school fire kills at least 10 students, media say
23 minutes -
Don’t cry urgency – Majority Chief Whip warns NPP over LGBTQ bill debate
30 minutes -
We can pass it by Friday – Dafeamekpor signals rapid move on LGBTQ bill
43 minutes -
We are not reenacting anything – Majority Chief Whip defends swift LGBTQ bill push
55 minutes -
LGBTQ bill will be passed in weeks, not months Majority Chief Whip Dafeamekpor
1 hour -
Thai court acquits opposition politician accused of royal insult
1 hour -
Google worker charged with using internal data to make $1.2m on bets
1 hour -
The world’s carmakers are struggling to compete with China
1 hour -
Oil prices jump after US launches new attacks on Iran
2 hours -
French Open: Jakub Mensik collapses on court as heatwave continues
2 hours