
Audio By Carbonatix
The lack of functional laboratory to support the diagnosis of Tuberculosis was a hindrance to detecting people with the disease in the Wa East District.The Wa East Director of Health Services, Mr. Joseph Bolibie, said the district has no hospital facility where patients would be diagnosed for TB and other communicable diseases.“This makes the district silent on TB detection but we assumed that there are people living with the disease undetected”, he remarked.He added: “People have to travel long distances on bad roads to the nearest health facilities for care as there is no hospital in the district.”Mr. Bolibie was speaking at the Upper West Regional launch of this year's Tuberculosis Week celebration at Kundungu on Sunday, which was on the theme: "TB here; TB everywhere".He said the district was faced with the challenges of access to health services, as there were no ambulance services to transport critically ill patients and emergencies to Wa and other referral hospitals.The District Director said TB is an airborne infection, which could affect any person but said it could be cured when detected early with appropriate treatment and management.He advised people with prolonged cough to report to health facilities for appropriate check up and treatment. He said treatment for the disease is free and people should not cite poverty to discourage them from accessing treatment.Mr. Bolibie said over the years, the Ghana Health Service and the Ministry of Health have sought to improve health care delivery through the introduction of disease specific programmes, such as National TB Control and HIV/AIDS Control Programmes aimed to reduce the incidence of these diseases in the country.He said the objective of the National TB Control Programme (NTCP) was to decrease morbidity and mortality due to tuberculosis, by detecting 70 per cent of existing cases at any time and to cure 85 per cent with less than 10 per
cent defaulter rate.Mr Bolibie however, expressed worry that the programme had not achieved its objective of reducing morbidity and mortality, especially in the rural and deprived communities due to the lack of functional laboratories.Source: GNA
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
-
Cedi dips further as external shocks intensify; one dollar equals GH¢11.70 at forex bureaus
4 minutes -
Sampa chieftaincy dispute: Sammordua dragged to court for contempt
11 minutes -
Okyere Baafi calls for suspension of Publican AI system over ‘serious flaws’
14 minutes -
Fuel fraud: OSP uncovers “secret collusion” between 5 oil companies and 3 state entities
20 minutes -
VIP Transport defends fare increase over rising fuel and maintenance costs
36 minutes -
LGBTQ+ issues not a priority for Ghanaians – Felix Kwakye Ofosu
50 minutes -
Kwakye Ofosu rejects NPP Minority’s call for apology over anti-LGBTQ bill
57 minutes -
Music giant Universal gets $64bn takeover offer
1 hour -
NPP criticism of anti-LGBTQ Bill ‘nothing more than political posturing’ — Kwakye Ofosu
1 hour -
Joy FM was birthed over a bowl of fufu’ – Tommy Annan-Forson shares interesting story
1 hour -
World Athletics to introduce standalone World Marathon Championships from 2030
1 hour -
Africa’s voice in global journalism grows as funding, AI and misinformation shape newsrooms
1 hour -
First Atlantic Bank holds Annual General Meeting, reports strong growth and bold outlook for 2026
2 hours -
Ghanaian-founded fintech WeWire secures Canadian PSP license to bridge African, global payments
2 hours -
Uganda confirms 2027 AFCON dates
2 hours