Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Lambussie and Board Chairman of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Prof Titus Beyuo, has called for the establishment of an emergency command centre to transform Ghana’s healthcare response system.
Speaking on JoyNews AM Show on February 25, he described it as a practical and urgent solution to the persistent challenges facing emergency healthcare delivery in the country.
According to Prof. Beyuo, Ghana needs a fully integrated command centre that can be accessed by anyone, patients, doctors, bystanders, or first responders during a medical emergency.
“A real solution is to have an emergency command centre,” he stated. “Once you call an ambulance, it should be directly linked to that centre.”
He explained that under such a system, all hospital beds nationwide would be digitally mapped and barcoded, allowing officials to instantly determine availability. Data from hospitals would be updated hourly, giving the command centre real-time visibility of capacity across the country.
“This command centre would see the entire nation at a glance, all referral points in one snapshot,” he said. “That way, patients can be efficiently distributed to facilities that are ready and equipped to handle them.”
Prof. Beyuo illustrated the concept with a practical scenario: if a bystander reports a middle-aged woman lying unconscious and bleeding at a specific location, the command centre would immediately log critical details and automatically generate a list of appropriate facilities capable of providing urgent care.
He noted that currently, ambulance teams often face delays because they must first determine which hospital can receive a patient.
“As it stands, when you call an ambulance, they still need to find out where the patient can be taken,” he said. “If the minister’s vision materialises, that will become a thing of the past.”
Prof. Beyuo emphasised that a centralised emergency command system would not only reduce delays but also save lives by ensuring faster coordination, better resource allocation, and seamless communication across Ghana’s healthcare network.
His comments come over the death of 29-year-old Charles Amissah, an engineer with Promasidor Ghana Limited, who sustained severe shoulder injuries in a hit-and-run accident at the Circle Overpass in Accra in February.
Reports indicate that Amissah was unable to secure admission at the Police Hospital, Ridge Hospital, and Korle Bu due to a lack of available beds. While at Korle Bu, he reportedly went into cardiac arrest.
Latest Stories
-
Security concerns force NDC Chairman to suspend North East ‘Thank You Tour’
7 minutes -
Africa’s food future hinges on leadership: The Infrastructure we can’t afford to ignore
24 minutes -
Australian mother who faked son’s cancer to fund lavish lifestyle jailed
37 minutes -
Amardeep Singh Hari named Ghana’s most influential tech entrepreneur of all time
51 minutes -
Oppong Nkrumah delivers on education; hands over 9th school to constituents in nine years
1 hour -
Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos bets on local power as grid falters
1 hour -
Kim Jong Un praises troops who ‘self-blasted’ to avoid capture by Ukraine
1 hour -
Banking sector rebounds as assets hit GH¢465bn – BoG Report
2 hours -
Al Fayed survivor was modern slavery victim, says Home Office
2 hours -
US not funding Congo’s $100m mine guard, embassy says
2 hours -
GFA to receive $2.5m from FIFA to prepare for World Cup and $10m for qualifying for tournament
2 hours -
Fuel prices dip from May 1 as diesel drops sharply, LPG set to surge
2 hours -
Say it as it is – Clergy reject pressure to stay quiet on politics
2 hours -
We’re citizens, not spectators – Christian Council defends speaking truth to power
3 hours -
My wife never caught me cheating – Richard Quaye dismisses viral infidelity claims
3 hours