
Audio By Carbonatix
The First Lady Mrs Rebecca Akufo-Addo has asked members of the Childhood Cancer Society of Ghana (CCSG) to continue supporting children with cancers to help them survive.
This according to her is because such children are among the most vulnerable in every society and need support.
The First Lady said this via zoom at the inauguration ceremony of the Childhood Cancer Society of Ghana (CCSG). It was on the theme, "Leveraging the Multidisciplinary Paediatric Oncology Team for Holistic Care and Optimal Outcomes."
The First Lady noted that there had been impressive achievements in reducing under-five mortality in Ghana from 127 per 1000 live births in 1990 to 46 per 1000 live births in 2019 due to the implementation of effective public health policies such as immunisation and malaria control.
She said unfortunately, those children were now at risk of ill-health and death from non-communicable diseases such as cancer and called for collaborative multi-stakeholder efforts.
The CCSG, comprising of health professionals and health workers, is mandated to advocate at the national level to ensure that children were able to access effective quality lifesaving care wherever they are.
It will also support the implementation of the National Childhood Cancer Strategy, which is at the draft stage.
The CCSG is expected to undertake awareness creation, facilitate capacity building, participate in policy development and come up with ingenious ways of promoting universal health coverage for children with cancer.
The First Lady said challenges of late presentation of cases, treatment abandonment and unnecessary suffering of children would soon be a thing of the past.
Mrs Akufo Addo noted that out of the estimated 400,000 children who developed cancers globally each year, 80% resided in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) such as Ghana. An estimated 90 per cent of the deaths also occur in LMICs.
A child with cancer in a high-income country would have over 80% chance of cure whereas, in LMICs, this is between 15%-45% with about 44% of children undiagnosed globally.
Currently out of the estimated over 1,200 children that would be expected to develop cancer annually in Ghana, only about 450 are diagnosed.
"Unfortunately this means the majority are unable to access specialist services and most likely die, unaccounted for," she stated.
The First Lady said with only five Paediatric Oncologists who were team leaders for the care of such children, the situation seemed quite dire but the good news was that over the next two years, Ghana would produce eight more who were presently undergoing training.
"With the postgraduate medical colleges producing other critical members of the multidisciplinary teams, we are looking forward to more fully functional comprehensive treatment centres in the near future," she said.
She urged national, international and individual stakeholders to contribute appropriately to help CCSG achieve its goals for the benefit of all children affected with cancer in the country.
Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, the Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, called for the implementation of the “rovering system” of paediatric oncology specialists.
He said by that system, instead of assigning the very limited paediatric oncologist to facilities, they could be assigned to catchment areas and encouraged them to be on call for those catchment areas.
The Director-General said leveraging on ICT in that regard would come in handy and that in the medium to long term, the granting of paid study leaves and scholarships to entice residency enrolments in the specialty area was a must.
Latest Stories
-
Muzic Mensah earns four nominations at 2026 Ghana Music Awards USA
54 minutes -
2026 U17 WWCQ: Black Maidens snatch late draw in first leg against Senegal
1 hour -
Flood mitigation should be continuous, not a one-off effort – Expert warns
2 hours -
From Tragedy to Triumph: Ghana’s path to flood resilience (A Story of Lessons Learned, Global Inspiration, and a Collective Commitment to a Better Future)
2 hours -
Kristo Asafo dispute centres on my father’s final directives, not inheritance — Adwoa Safo
2 hours -
Kristo Asafo saga: ‘My dad didn’t die intestate; he left a valid will’ – Adwoa Safo
2 hours -
New Eastern Regional Fire Commander tours stations, identifies key operational challenges
3 hours -
Government fully responsible for Accra flooding crisis – Miracles Aboagye
3 hours -
Successive governments have failed to address flooding crisis – Susan Adu-Amankwah
3 hours -
No one can hold title on Ramsar sites – Inusah Fuseini warns against encroachment
3 hours -
We don’t need prayers or relief items; enforce the law – Samson Lardy Anyenini on recurring floods
3 hours -
Fresh attempt to remove seized galamsey excavators in Aowin sparks controversy
3 hours -
Susan Adu-Amankwah urges African governments to evacuate citizens over South Africa xenophobic attacks
3 hours -
Former Finance Minister Amin Adam hands over Masjid Al-Noor to Muslim community
3 hours -
Bawumia commends Amin Adam for visionary Masjid Al Noor project in Tamale
3 hours