
Audio By Carbonatix
A Fellow with the Centre for Democratic Development (CDD), Kwame Sarpong Asiedu, says only 5% of the country’s consultation rooms have the necessary tools to properly diagnose patients, yet government after government keeps building hospitals without addressing the real problems.
“We should stop the political dishonesty,” he said bluntly on Joy News’ PM Express on Wednesday night.
“Because whatever Richard Salomey, General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), is saying and whatever I’m saying are in documents like I have referred to.”
Mr. Sarpong Asiedu pointed to a powerful and damning document: the Holistic Assessment of Health Program of Works, part of a broader Health Harmonisation Assessment Report endorsed by Ghana’s Ministry of Health, the Ghana Health Service, the Global Fund and the World Health Organisation.
“It is not me saying it,” he said. “It is in the report that was commissioned by the Government of Ghana, the Ministry of Health, the Ghana Health Service, the Global Fund and the WHO. So it’s an internationally accepted report that is done for all countries that are members of the WHO.”
That report states clearly that only 5% of Ghana’s consultation rooms are equipped well enough to make proper diagnoses.
Yet despite this, Sarpong Asiedu lamented, successive governments ignore the data and instead spend millions building hospitals that remain hollow shells of functionality.
“We jettisoned that report and went into building hospitals,” he said, shaking his head.
“That is what I say, that as health professionals, this is what we should be telling the policymakers and the ultimate spenders, which in this case is the Health Minister.”
His message to fellow health professionals was a call to conscience and accountability.
“If you make these decisions which are at variance with what the health assessment reports say, then we would walk away. It’s as simple as that.”
He did not mince words about the leadership of the sector either, referencing the recent removal of the CEO of the Tamale Teaching Hospital.
“That’s why I struggle to support the sacked CEO of the Tamale Teaching Hospital,” he said.
“Because all of us—myself included, Richard [Salome], the president of the Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana, the president of the GMA—we have all read this report.”
He questioned why leaders within the sector sat silently for years, knowing the contents of these assessments, yet continued to oversee a system that prioritised appearances over substance.
“We have our colleagues sitting and superintending when what is in the reports is not being done,” he said.
“Now you find yourself in confrontation with the Minister, I cannot support you.”
He insisted that he had already made his position known publicly.
“That’s why I spoke out when those reports came out, to say nobody should be working under those facilities.”
To Sarpong Asiedu, the disconnect between what the evidence demands and what political actors pursue is too glaring to ignore.
“How do you sit down when those reports say what they say?” he asked.
“We are building structures and calling them hospitals, but inside, they cannot treat.”
Latest Stories
-
NADMO says it warned of heavy rains and took steps to reduce flooding in Accra
6 minutes -
Henry Quartey blames weak enforcement for worsening Accra floods
9 minutes -
India asks WhatsApp to pause username feature rollout over fraud concerns
12 minutes -
South African state complicit in xenophobic violence – Fiifi Boafo
15 minutes -
NPP North East Regional Secretary declares bid for chairman position, says he’s tried and tested
26 minutes -
Bus fares, rent, and school fees push Ghana’s inflation to 5.3% in June
32 minutes -
WANEP urges stronger youth inclusion in West Africa’s political decision-making
33 minutes -
GES debunks viral claim that floodwaters destroyed WASSCE papers
35 minutes -
Mindful Governance brings Karl George MBE’s AI Wake-Up Call to Ghana’s boards
39 minutes -
Solomon Owusu accuses South African government of backing attacks on Ghanaians
49 minutes -
Henry Quartey calls for broader representation on government’s Anti-Flood Taskforce
1 hour -
Finance Ministry releases GH¢350 million for flood relief and mitigation following Mahama directive
1 hour -
Flood-hit Ghana Digital Centres says staff not dismissed, contracts only temporarily suspended
2 hours -
No severe rainfall expected today, but showers likely over weekend – GMet
2 hours -
Today’s front pages: Thursday, July 2, 2026
2 hours