Audio By Carbonatix
President John Dramani Mahama has opened the 66th Annual Conference of the West African College of Surgeons (WACS), urging governments and health stakeholders to prioritise stronger surgical capacity to improve health outcomes across the sub-region.
Addressing participants at the opening ceremony on Monday, February 9, President Mahama described surgery as a critical pillar of healthcare, closely linked to human dignity, productivity, and national development.

He stressed that building surgical capacity must go beyond training more surgeons to include stronger health systems, multidisciplinary teams, effective governance, and equitable access to care.
The conference, held under the theme “Capacity Building in Surgery for Improved Health Outcomes in West Africa,” brought together surgeons, health professionals, researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders from across the region to advance collaboration and innovation in specialist care.

President Mahama reaffirmed Ghana’s commitment to strengthening surgical training, expanding health infrastructure, and improving specialist services within the country and across West Africa.
In recognition of his contributions to surgical development, he was honoured as Grand Patron and inducted as an Honorary Fellow of the West African College of Surgeons.

Health Minister Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, in his remarks, underscored the importance of surgery as a core component of functional health systems rather than an optional service.
He noted that safe and effective surgery depends on system readiness, including reliable infrastructure, blood and diagnostic services, intensive care units, and strong clinical governance frameworks.

He commended WACS for promoting global standards through regional collaboration and revealed that a surgical outreach programme organised alongside the conference delivered 855 surgical procedures across 11 hospitals in six regions of Ghana.
The Health Minister also addressed the challenge of health worker migration, calling for improved working conditions, structured career progression, and deeper engagement with the medical diaspora to retain and attract skilled professionals.

The 66th WACS Conference is expected to chart new pathways for strengthening surgical care and specialist training, positioning West Africa to better meet its growing healthcare needs.
Latest Stories
-
Thai court acquits opposition politician accused of royal insult
28 minutes -
Google worker charged with using internal data to make $1.2m on bets
32 minutes -
The world’s carmakers are struggling to compete with China
35 minutes -
Oil prices jump after US launches new attacks on Iran
42 minutes -
French Open: Jakub Mensik collapses on court as heatwave continues
48 minutes -
‘Magician’ Gael Monfils exits final French Open
52 minutes -
Robertson close to Spurs move after Liverpool exit
58 minutes -
Pochettino defends not phoning axed US players
1 hour -
India’s ‘unsafe’ 70ft Messi statue to be moved
1 hour -
Crystal Palace win Conference League with sperb victorty over Rayo Vallecano
1 hour -
Tottenham Hotspur needed ‘complete reset’, says under fire CEO
1 hour -
Nuno to stay as West Ham boss after relegation
1 hour -
FIFA ordered to explain World Cup ticket pricing
1 hour -
Barca agree £69m-plus deal with Newcastle for Gordon
1 hour -
Energy Minister cautions ECG engineers against politicising their work
1 hour