Audio By Carbonatix
Head of Administration at the Upper East Regional Hospital, Mr Zakariah Yakubu, has called on nurses to make careful records of all interactions with patients.
He said if they properly document all procedures carried out on patients, the law would not hold them responsible for negligence, because they would have records to show for work done.
Mr Yakubu said this when he facilitated a two-day induction workshop to school about 140 newly posted nurses and midwives at the facility on what was required of them per the rules and regulations of the hospital and the Ghana Health Services (GHS).
The personnel were taken through customer care, pre-operative and post-operative care of patients, administration of oxygen, patient charter and the core values of the GHS.
Mr Yakubu reminded the personnel that they were at the hospital to have a feel of practical work having received tuition in the classroom on the nursing business.
He said any procedure not documented means work is not done adding that they depended greatly on health insurance clients who constitute about 97 per cent of clients visiting the hospital for medical attention.
“Our biggest clientele is health insurance clients, so if you do not do proper documentation, health insurance clinical audit would conclude that you have not provided quality service to their clients and this could incur cost for the hospital”, he explained.
Mr Yakubu said people-centeredness, professionalism, teamwork, innovation, discipline and integrity were the core mandate of the GHS and urged the nurses and midwives to ensure that these values and ethics of the nursing profession reflected in the services they would be rendering to clients.
Mr Thomas Lambon, an Anaesthetist at the hospital, took the personnel through pre and post-operative care of patients.
He said anxiety was very common with patients booked for operation in the theatre and urged the personnel to ensure that intensive education and reassurance were done as part of preparations of patients for theatre.
Mr Lambon, who doubles as the Regional Chairman of the Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives Association (GRNMA), said even though the hospital lacked some equipment in its critical units, it was not a reason for nurses to take to “shortcuts” in patient care.
Mr Irenious Angso, the Human Resource Manager at the Hospital, counselled them to be guided by a responsible attitude so as to leave a good impression of themselves on patients.
Latest Stories
-
Kwaku Azar writes: A-G vs OSP
29 minutes -
Mfantsipim–Adisadel rivalry built excellence, not division – Sam Jonah
54 minutes -
Vice President launches Mfantsipim’s 150 years of shaping Ghana’s greatest mind
1 hour -
I assure Otumfuo, Mahama will join him to commission KNUST Teaching Hospital by end of this year – Haruna Iddrisu
2 hours -
Barcelona dominate derby to extend La Liga lead
2 hours -
Gov’t to roll out free special education for persons with disabilities from July 1 – Education Minister
2 hours -
Importers and Exporters Association declares full support for Publican AI port system
3 hours -
“We used it to test our officiating officials’ readiness” – Bawah Fuseini after CAA Athletics event
3 hours -
Volleyball emerges as Ghana’s fastest rising sport
3 hours -
National Sports Fund needs strong leadership from the top – Administrator David Wuaku
3 hours -
JoySports Exclusive: Steve McLaren in talks with GFA after expressing interest in Black Stars job
3 hours -
Fire guts auto parts warehouse at Bubuashie, one fire officer injured
3 hours -
I owe my victory to coach Ofori Asare – Allotey after winning WBA Africa Gold Super Flyweight belt
3 hours -
Church of Pentecost supports over 2,000 BECE candidates in Obuasi with career guidance seminar
5 hours -
Brandon Asante and Coventry all but promoted to Premier League despite Sheffield Wednesday draw
5 hours