Audio By Carbonatix
Did Ghana truly need 110 brand-new hospitals, costing over a billion dollars, delivered in one sweep? Were we in the grip of a deadly plague, or facing an imminent public-health catastrophe that demanded such simultaneity? If not, then it is reasonable, even responsible, to ask whether urgency was confused with sequencing.
Healthcare infrastructure matters. No serious country disputes that. But hospitals are not monuments; they are living systems. A hospital without doctors, nurses, technicians, equipment and steady operational funding is not healthcare. It is a building in search of purpose.
If the concern was preparedness for a major national health risk, there were far more flexible and cost-effective options available. Field hospitals, modular units and rapidly deployable facilities could have been established at a fraction of the cost, scaled up or down as needed, and decommissioned or relocated once the risk passed. Many countries rely on such systems precisely because they preserve fiscal space while ensuring readiness.
Now that construction has commenced and political arguments are largely settled, pragmatism must replace pride. The real question is not whether hospitals are good, but whether all of them are immediately necessary, and whether insisting on their simultaneous activation serves the public interest.
Ghana already struggles with uneven distribution of health professionals, chronic equipment shortages and recurrent budget stress. Opening scores of new hospitals at once risks spreading scarce personnel thinly, creating empty wards, underutilised theatres and facilities that quietly deteriorate while communities wonder why gleaming structures deliver so little care.
There is a more intelligent path forward: prioritisation and repurposing.
Hospitals in critically underserved or high-burden areas should be fast-tracked, fully staffed and properly equipped. Others, especially in locations without immediate demand or workforce readiness, can be temporarily repurposed without abandoning their long-term health function.
Some of these facilities can become specialised vocational training and production hubs aligned with Ghana’s urgent economic needs. Health-adjacent skills such as biomedical equipment maintenance, pharmaceutical production, medical consumables manufacturing, health data management and laboratory technology can be taught and practised in these spaces. Beyond health, they can support technical training in agro-processing, light manufacturing and other productive sectors that generate real jobs.
This is not a retreat from healthcare. It is an investment in the foundations that make healthcare sustainable. A country that cannot produce, maintain and staff its systems will always be dependent, overstretched and vulnerable.
Good health is not only about hospitals. It is about employment, skills, productivity and dignity. An economy that works keeps people healthy long before they reach a hospital bed.
We do not need empty hospitals searching for personnel and equipment. We need functioning systems that respond to real demand, and productive institutions that prepare our people for the work that builds national resilience.
If we truly want to be healthy as a nation, we must learn that timing, sequencing and purpose matter just as much as ambition.
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