Audio By Carbonatix
The Programmes Manager for the Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) programme, Ghana Health Service (GHS), has called on the public to help fight NTDs to do away with poverty.
Dr Benjamin Marfo said NTDs increased the cycle of poverty, and need to be controlled to enhance the financial ability of people and the economy at large.
NTDs include Elephantiasis, River Blindness, Buruli Ulcer, Leprosy, River Blindness, and Intestinal Worm Infestation.
“When a person has elephantiasis or river blindness, they are not able to work and the person cannot go to the farm if he or she is a farmer, so that might be the beginning of poverty in the person’s home. So if we start fighting this, poverty in the country will reduce,” he said.
Dr Marfo made the call on Saturday when the GHS embarked on a health walk to sensitise the public on NTDs to mark the commemoration of the “World Neglected Tropical Diseases Day”.
He disclosed that the GHS had eliminated Trachoma and Guinea Worm Diseases and was hopeful to totally eliminate other diseases that were neglected.
He advised the public to resort to environmental and health hygiene practices to reduce the incidence of such diseases.
“Elephantiasis for instance is caused by bite from mosquitoes, therefore, keeping environments clean and free from mosquitoes would help to reduce the rate at which people are getting it,” he added.
Dr Dacosta Aboagye, the Director of Health Promotion, GHS, reiterated the need for the entire citizenry to keep their environments and water bodies clean to prevent the spread of such cases of NTDs.
The campaign to fight NTDs, he said, had just began, adding that the GHS would not relent its efforts until something positive had been achieved.
The poor and people in deprived communities, he said, were mostly affected by these diseases, hence the GHS was also embarking on house-to-house campaign in rural communities to educate them on preventive practices.
Dr Aboagye called on the public to join forces with the GHS to spread knowledge about NTDs, especially on January 30, 2020, when it would launch a campaign to fight it at ‘Mantse Agbona' in Jamestown, Accra.
Latest Stories
-
Bond market: Turnover rises by 343% to GH¢7.16bn
3 minutes -
GBLA 2026 set to honour business excellence and leadership
13 minutes -
Feed Ghana programme targets tomato self-sufficiency to stabilise prices
14 minutes -
Intelligence is accumulated experience in motion
19 minutes -
MoFA distributes 40k bags of fertilizer, drones to boost food production in Northern Ghana
20 minutes -
NDC orchestrated CJ’s removal on weak grounds – Alfred Tuah-Yeboah
28 minutes -
Amenfiman Community Bank delivers 71% return on investment to shareholders
42 minutes -
Future NPP government could reopen discontinued criminal cases – Tuah-Yeboah
48 minutes -
Your retention problem isn’t about pay – It’s about progress
48 minutes -
Parliament to push for compensation for GBC over land taken by GRA—Felix Ofosu
50 minutes -
SeamlessHR backs Ghana’s digital transformation agenda at the 10th Ghana CEO Summit
54 minutes -
Gov’t distributes 40,000 bags of fertiliser and drones to farmers under Feed Ghana Programme
1 hour -
GRASAG welcomes Ghana National Research Fund launch, urges graduate inclusion
1 hour -
There’s nothing like consensual sexual affair between teacher, student – GES
1 hour -
EOCO declares Joseph Owusu Badu wanted over alleged investment fraud
1 hour