
Audio By Carbonatix
The committee investigating the death of Charles Amissah has reconstructed a detailed timeline of events, concluding that the patient was alive throughout multiple transfers between emergency responders and health facilities before eventually dying after more than an hour of attempts to secure definitive care.
The 29-year-old engineer with Promasidor Ghana Limited was reportedly knocked down in a hit-and-run incident near the Kwame Nkrumah Circle Overpass in Accra on February 6, 2026.
He was initially attended to by personnel from the National Ambulance Service but later faced difficulties accessing emergency care.
Chair of the three-member committee, Agyeman Badu Akosa, said the timeline shows a continuous chain of movement from the accident scene to several major hospitals, with repeated failures to stabilise the patient.
“And I think that, for me, this tells the whole story,” Prof. Akosa said, as he outlined the sequence of events.
According to the committee, the incident occurred at 00:00 when the accident scene was first recorded. The ambulance arrived shortly after and transported the victim to the hospital within 11 minutes.
“At 22:32, this was the incident scene. The ambulance got to the accident site. From there, 11 minutes later, they arrived at Police Hospital,” he explained.
However, the committee says the patient was not stabilised at the first point of contact and was subsequently transferred to the Greater Accra Regional Hospital at 22:58.
“Again, at Greater Accra Regional Hospital, they were moved on to Korle Bu Teaching Hospital,” he added.
From there, the patient was reportedly transferred again, arriving at Korle Bu Teaching Hospital at 23:20. Despite being alive at every stage, Prof. Akosa said there was still no definitive intervention.
“In all, this patient was alive,” he noted.
The committee further revealed that a final referral was considered to the University of Ghana Medical Centre (UGMC), but the ambulance crew reportedly declined to proceed.
“At Korle Bu, there was no joy. In fact, he was moved on to go to UGMC, but the ambulance crew refused to move,” Prof. Akosa said.
The patient was eventually pronounced dead at approximately 00:30, about 118 minutes after the initial incident.
Latest Stories
-
Bole-Bamboi MP to commission renovated classroom blocks to improve learning environment
34 minutes -
Father’s Day: UMB marks occasion with courtesy call on Mahama
40 minutes -
AG opposes bid to delay judgment in Wontumi Samreboi trial
47 minutes -
Parliamentary Education Committee visits Ghana Scholarship Authority
57 minutes -
Ghana, UK move closer to signing forestry partnership agreement – Yusif Sulemana
58 minutes -
Fuel Levy cash cleared IPP debts and restored Ghana’s credit standing – PURC boss
1 hour -
‘Keeping the lights on Costs $92m a month’ – PURC boss reveals hidden power bill
2 hours -
Boakye Agyarko outlines plan to strengthen NPP communications machinery ahead of 2028
2 hours -
Takoradi MP proposes policies to streamline Ghana’s mining industry
2 hours -
Defilement: Victim’s family praises DOVVSU, recommends promotion for two personnel
2 hours -
Two friends granted GH$200k bail over gold theft
2 hours -
24 pick nomination forms for Akan NPP executive elections
2 hours -
Gender, Finance ministries explore incentives for institutions complying with Affirmative Action Law
2 hours -
Flooding in Ghana: Asantehene calls for engineering solutions
3 hours -
Read Full Judgment that sent Herald Editor Larry Dogbey to prison for 7 days
3 hours