
Audio By Carbonatix
A worrying concern in Ghana’s pharmaceutical sector has been exposed, with the Rx24 group, comprising newly qualified pharmacists, accusing the Ministry of Health (MoH) of severe delays in posting them for their mandatory housemanship.
The group, which completed its professional requirements nearly a year ago, is demanding the immediate release of financial clearance and posting orders.
The ministry’s inaction has sidelined dozens of highly trained healthcare professionals at a time when the nation's health system requires an adequate supply of certified practitioners to manage pharmaceutical care, drug dispensing, and supply chain integrity across hospitals and health centres.
Nine Months in Limbo
The aggrieved pharmacists of the Rx24 cohort claim they have met every academic and professional hurdle necessary to begin their supervised practice.
Despite fulfilling critical requirements, the entire group remains unemployed, unable to contribute to the public health sector due to administrative bottlenecks at the MoH and associated financial agencies.
Speaking on behalf of the group, Public Relations Officer, Dr. Ernest Cudjoe Anorbor highlighted the frustration of waiting nearly 12 months for the government to fulfil its obligation.
"The pharmacists have met all professional requirements, completing the six-year Doctor of Pharmacy programme and passing the Ghana Pharmacy Professional Qualifying Examination (GPPQE) in November 2024, yet they remain unposted."
Impact on Public Health System
The delay is not merely an employment issue; it represents a deficit in skilled human resources within the national health structure.
Housemanship is the compulsory period of professional training that transforms an academic graduate into a fully certified pharmacist. The prolonged absence of the Rx24 cohort affects the entire healthcare supply chain:
- Hospital Pharmacies: Hospitals, especially in rural and underserved areas, rely on house officers to maintain staffing levels for dispensing medication and providing patient counselling.
- Cost Implications: While the pharmacists are awaiting posting, the government continues to pay salaries to existing staff who are shouldering extra workload due to the staff deficit.
- Professional Decay: Extended unemployment after high-level academic training risks professional knowledge becoming stale, potentially compromising future performance.
Rx24 is therefore urging the Ministry of Health to expedite the necessary financial clearance and deployment procedures to mobilise these crucial healthcare assets across Ghana immediately.
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