Audio By Carbonatix
The Ministry of Health has urged Ghanaians to remain calm but vigilant following the declaration of the recent Ebola Virus Disease outbreak as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) by the World Health Organization (WHO) over fears of cross-border transmission.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, May 19, the Ministry said that although no Ebola cases have been recorded in Ghana or elsewhere in West Africa, citizens must strictly observe preventive measures to help protect public health.
According to the Ministry, Ebola is a severe and often fatal disease spread through direct contact with the blood, body fluids, secretions, organs, or contaminated materials of infected persons.
The Ministry advised the public to observe universal safety precautions at all times, especially during public activities and mass gatherings.
Individuals have been encouraged to carry personal hand sanitisers and maintain proper hand hygiene, while organisers of events have been urged to provide handwashing facilities and sanitisers for participants.
The Ministry further stressed the importance of regular handwashing with soap under running water or the use of alcohol-based hand sanitisers in homes, schools, workplaces, markets, public spaces and points of entry.
Ghanaians have also been cautioned against spreading rumours or misinformation, with the Ministry urging the public to rely only on official government and health authority communication channels for updates.
The Ministry advised anyone experiencing symptoms such as sudden fever, headache, muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhoea or unexplained bleeding to immediately report to the nearest health facility for medical attention.
It noted that early detection and treatment significantly improve survival rates and help reduce transmission.
The Ministry said it is working closely with the Ghana Health Service and international partners to strengthen surveillance, screening, preparedness and response measures across the country.
“The cooperation of every citizen is essential in preventing the spread of Ebola. Together, we can protect our families and communities,” the statement said.
The WHO recently declared the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda a Public Health Emergency of International Concern following rising infections and concerns over regional spread.
Read the full statement below


Latest Stories
-
PAC orders Anlo-Afiadanyigba SHS to pay GH₵10k arrears to casual workers
14 minutes -
Rockefeller Foundation awards over US$350m, reaching 731 million people amid global aid decline
15 minutes -
Women bear the heaviest burden after climate disasters – GreenFaith Africa
31 minutes -
APN calls for urgent mobile money interoperability across Africa
38 minutes -
Portugal’s Ronaldo set for record sixth World Cup
41 minutes -
Cedi depreciates by 8.4% against dollar in interbank market
48 minutes -
Arsenal are 2025/26 EPL champions after Man City draw at Bournemouth
58 minutes -
CSOs will bring new dimensions to OSP constitutionality case – Justice Abdulai
1 hour -
Ghana’s pubic debt hits GH¢674.1bn as of February 2026
1 hour -
Mamprugu king accuses security agencies of abuse, demands justice over death of Mamprusi youth
1 hour -
Ghana has not exited IMF, PCI is a new three-year deal – Oppong Nkrumah
1 hour -
Health Ministry issues Ebola alert after WHO declares global public health emergency
2 hours -
Asiedu Nketia enskinned as Kashentengwura in Bole
2 hours -
Ghana secures $40m diaspora investment fund as entry point for Africa growth push in Atlanta Dialogue
2 hours -
Abronye DC case: Detention doesn’t take away right to healthcare – Martin Kpebu
2 hours