Audio By Carbonatix
The Government and Hospital Pharmacists Association (GHOSPA) has issued an urgent appeal to President John Mahama and relevant ministries to clear and post 599 inducted pharmacists who have been left idle for 10 months after completing their training.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, September 10, the association said the delays have created a dangerous gap in the country’s healthcare system, while also stalling the careers and livelihoods of the affected graduates.
“The non-posting of these 599 pharmacists means our hospitals are operating without this critical layer of patient safety and clinical support, leading to an unsustainable workload for existing staff and sub-optimal patient care,” GHOSPA said.
According to the group, pharmacists have not been recruited into the public service for the past five years, leaving hospitals across the country severely understaffed.
It said that at the Effia-Nkwanta Regional Hospital, only 11 pharmacists are currently employed instead of the 35 required under the Ministry of Health’s staffing norms.
GHOSPA warned that the prolonged delay is having devastating effects on the professional and personal lives of the young pharmacists.
"For the 599 inducted pharmacists, this 10-month delay is not merely an administrative hurdle; it is a period of professional stagnation and personal anxiety with severe consequences."
The association stressed that deploying the pharmacists should be seen not as an expense, but as a critical investment in Ghana’s health system.
"We acknowledge the fiscal responsibilities of government. However, we firmly believe that the deployment of these pharmacists is not an expense, but a critical investment into the nation’s health security and a moral obligation to its future healthcare leaders," the statement read.
GHOSPA is urging the government to issue immediate financial clearance for the 599 inducted pharmacists, facilitate their posting to accredited health facilities to begin housemanship, and establish a sustainable system to prevent such delays in the future.
“Our health system is in dire need of their expertise. Our young professionals are in dire need of the opportunity to serve. We call on the government to act now to secure both the future of these pharmacists and the health of the nation,” the statement added.
Latest Stories
-
Mother of Alexei Navalny says poison finding confirms he was murdered
5 minutes -
Gov’t approves cabinet directives following review of over 8,000 land leases nationwide
6 minutes -
In an uncertain trade landscape, cooperation still delivers
9 minutes -
7 Ghanaian traders killed in Titao terrorist attack buried in Burkina Faso
19 minutes -
Northern teachers protest ‘fake appointment’ claims
24 minutes -
Greater Accra Regional Minister hasn’t sanctioned any selective demolitions of billboards – GARCC replies AAG
26 minutes -
UniMAC-Journalism and Media Students Association (JOMSA) launched
36 minutes -
MTN and CalBank collect 7,020 pints of blood in ‘Save a life’ drive
38 minutes -
Ken Agyapong’s camp denies breakaway party claims
43 minutes -
Photos: Mahama commissions new Ghana embassy chancery in Addis Ababa
44 minutes -
UniMAC committed to producing ethically grounded, socially responsible journalists – Dean
47 minutes -
Patrick Boamah casts doubts over gov’t’s plan to extradite a Russian suspect in sexual exploitation saga
51 minutes -
Advocacy group pledges to pursue cases of wrongful convictions
51 minutes -
Li Yang: China’s zero-tariff policy helps made-in-Ghana products expand into the Chinese market
56 minutes -
Russian Embassy in Ghana acknowledges reports on sexual exploitation case
1 hour
