Audio By Carbonatix
Some service providers under the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) have been dispensing wrong drugs to some patients who are registered with the scheme, the Director of Research and Development at the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA), Mr Osei-Boateng Acheampong, has revealed.
According to him, the NHlA had realised that drugs prescribed for some patients were not appropriate to cure the diseases suffered by the patients.
He said in most cases, the drugs were above the illnesses for which they were prescribed and that situation usually arose because some prescribers were not properly educated on the drugs to prescribe at which level of care.
Mr Acheampong made this known in Tamale when he addressed the media on the sidelines of a workshop for various service providers in the three regions of the north.
The workshop sought to sensitise the service providers to the expanded medicine list and the guidelines regarding the prescription and dispensation of drugs under the NHIS.
The NHIA research director noted that the prescription of drugs was partly determined by the level of the caregiver or facility.
He said while facilities such as regional and teaching hospitals qualified as secondary facilities, district hospitals, clinics and Community Health Planning Services (CHPS) compounds qualified as primary health caregivers.
Mr Acheampong explained that not all drugs could be administered at the primary level of care because conditions that were handled by these facilities did not require them to dispense those drugs.
"When a patient's condition requires a drug that can only be administered at the secondary level, then it means the patient, if he or she is at the primary facility, must be referred to the secondary level facility for adequate care," he further explained.
Mr Acheampong hinted that the NHlA would soon introduce a new standardised prescription form to iron out some inconsistencies that resulted in the lack of a uniform prescription form.
He said, for instance, that payments made to providers for drugs alone constituted 58 per cent of all payments, adding that that resulted from such inconsistencies in the prescription and dispensing of drugs.
Source: Daily Graphic
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Most Ghanaians say living conditions have improved over the past year – Global InfoAnalytics
11 minutes -
Banks and Telcos respect Only Money, not Customers
15 minutes -
Majority of voters back extension of presidential term to 5 years – Poll
35 minutes -
Kennedy Agyapong has what it takes to defeat NDC if he wins NPP primaries – Aide
37 minutes -
Ghana’s Extradition Bid for former Finance Minister faces Probable Cause hurdle in US Federal Courts
38 minutes -
Benjamin Asare is 70% ready to return – Didi Dramani
54 minutes -
GH₵50 fee dispute turns violent as client assaults sex worker in Sekondi
1 hour -
ECG restores electricity credit purchases for MMS-compliant meters
2 hours -
Gender Ministry, SOC-G, validates Non-Profit Organisation Secretariat operational documents
2 hours -
ECG restores power credit purchases for MMS-compliant prepaid meters
2 hours -
Nafan FC crowned champions of inaugural PAJ Foundation giveback tournament
2 hours -
Prof H. Prempeh questions compulsory retirement at 60, proposes extended working age for lecturers
2 hours -
Trump says progress made in Ukraine talks but ‘thorny issues’ remain
3 hours -
Fear and confusion in Nigerian village hit in US strike, as locals say no history of ISIS in area
3 hours -
Health Minister calls for collective action to fast-track Western North’s development
3 hours
