Audio By Carbonatix
The Upper West Region will soon benefit from a Sickle Cell Clinic and counseling Unit.
The facility, which is being set up by Sickle Cell Condition
Advocates (SICCA), a non-governmental organisation in collaboration with the Government of Ghana is expected to support sickle cell patients to live longer and contribute to the development of society.
Madam Charlotte Owusu, the Founder of SICCA, who disclosed this at a sickle cell sensitisation forum in Wa said the facility, when set up, would be managed by the Social Welfare Department.
She noted that the sickle cell disease was the fastest growing disease in the world affecting about two percent of the population in areas where it was found.
Again “about 80 to 90 percent of children who die of sickle cell die of infection”, she said.
Madam Charlotte defined the sickle cell condition as the passing on of abnormal haemoglobin to a child by the parents.
Sickle cell is a common disease in Africa, India, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean Basin.
She said according to a study conducted by a sickle cell organisation in Kumasi, about 75 percent of Ghana’s population have normal blood cells while the remaining 25 percent have abnormal blood cells.
She explained that the normal cells passed through the blood vessels easily while the abnormal ones find it difficult to pass through the blood vessels, thereby, causing a lot of pain to the sickle cell patient.
The effects of the disease, she noted, include anemia, jaundice,
repeated infection, and chronic leg ulcer, damage to some organs, stroke, delay in growth and severe bone, joint, chest and abdominal pains.
The SICCA founder said despite the alarming situation of the disease, very few people had knowledge about the condition.
Madam Charlotte said it was in view of this that her organization was collaborating with the government to educate the public about the disease.
She said activities of the campaign include training programmes for health personnel and volunteers, sensitisation workshops for basic schools, faith groups as well as a blood donation exercise to create public awareness.
Madam Charlotte urged the staff of the Information Services
Department, Social Welfare, Ghana Education Service (GES) and the media to help carry the message to the people.
She advised young men and women to go for sickle cell tests to know their status so that they could choose the right partners that would enable them give birth to healthy babies.
Source: GNA/Ghana
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
-
GRIDCo appoints Frank Asirifi Otchere as Chief Executive, confirms two deputy executives
3 minutes -
Parliament ready to pass Property Rights of Spouses Bill under urgency – Speaker
24 minutes -
FIDA Ghana petitions Parliament to fast-track Property Rights of Spouses Bill
33 minutes -
Hantavirus Outbreak: Ghana Health Service heightens surveillance
53 minutes -
Eastern Regional NSA PRO laments poor conditions of serviceÂ
1 hour -
Newsfile to discuss Charles Amissah’s death, PDS, NAFCO arrests, and press freedom under Mahama
1 hour -
GRASAG backs Rent Control over hostel price hikes, calls for urgent gov’t intervention
2 hours -
Man Utd’s Bruno Fernandes wins Football Writers’ men’s award
2 hours -
Did the Bank of Ghana hide any losses?
2 hours -
Medicine Society calls for fair process, cautions against blaming health workers in Amissah death report
2 hours -
We remain committed to maintaining fiscal discipline to fast track BoG’s recovery – Seth Terkper
3 hours -
The Brotherhood: Panel exposes major red flags in male friendships
3 hours -
The Cost of Stabilising Ghana: Why the Bank of Ghana’s 2025 losses may be the price of macroeconomic recovery
3 hours -
Gold Fields, Ghana FA sign $5 million two-year sponsorship deal
3 hours -
From Blogging to Production: The growth of Alexander Fifi Abaka in Ghana’s media space
3 hours