Audio By Carbonatix
Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has supported the establishment of a Strategic National Stockpile, which the country can immediately fall on to deal with future public health emergencies.
He endorsed the recommendation by the National Security Covid-19 Technical Committee for provision of the necessary relief items to the National Relief Fund to provide immediate support for deployment of personnel and coordination of appropriate responses to national emergencies.
Dr Bawumia also lauded the inter-ministerial and inter-agency partnership in managing the Covid-19 pandemic and supported the call that a national blueprint should be drafted to serve as a benchmark for managing future emergencies.
Speaking at an appraisal ceremony of the National Security Operation Covid-19 Taskforce in Accra, Vice President Bawumia commended faith-based and civil society organisations for their enormous support in the successful management of the pandemic.
He commended the National Security Covid-19 Technical Committee for the yeoman's job and called on all well-meaning Ghanaians to avoid complacency and to adhere strictly to the preventive directives, especially the wearing of nose masks, to avert any potential spikes.
He said President Akufo-Addo’s leadership in tackling the pandemic was commendable, especially as he relied on science and data from health experts in taking decisions.
Over the past 6 months, Ghana had recorded 45,655 confirmed Covid-19 cases after conducting more than 450,000 tests.
Currently, Ghana has the lowest infectious rate in Sub-Saharan Africa, with less than 600 active cases and over 44,000 recoveries, representing 97.5 per cent, with 294 deaths, representing 0.64 per cent fatality rate.
Dr Bawumia noted that the country adopted innovative approaches in managing the Covid-19 pandemic, which has boosted her reputation globally and is rated among the top 6 best countries in the world in tackling the pandemic.
He said the Covid-19 pandemic was a major threat to national security and since there was no blueprint, it led to the setting up of a general framework and technical task force, which applied the three Ts - testing, tracing and treatment - in managing the virus.
Also, the Enhanced Contact Tracing system helped to chase the virus, rather than waiting for it, he added.
The Deputy Minister of National Security, Mr Henry Quartey, who chaired the National Technical Covid-19 Committee, read the Committee's report and recommendations.
The Committee recommended the increase in testing capacity of infectious diseases in the country, establishment of a National Strategic Stockpile to manage future public health emergencies, and ensuring uniformity and compliance in all protocols.
Latest Stories
-
34 injured as bus crashes at Asuboi on Accra–Kumasi Highway
29 minutes -
Galamsey: NAIMOS arrests foreign nationals, cleans up Birim River
1 hour -
Man captured in viral video assaulting lady remanded amid fresh sextortion allegations
2 hours -
Around 1,500 soldiers on standby for deployment to Minneapolis, officials say
4 hours -
Faisal Islam: Trump’s Greenland threats to allies are without parallel
4 hours -
Ex-GBA President accuses NDC of driving move to remove GBA from constitution
5 hours -
Trump’s double pardon underscores sweeping use of clemency
6 hours -
Morocco and Senegal set for defining AFCON final under Rabat lights today
7 hours -
Trump tariff threat over Greenland ‘unacceptable’, European leaders say
8 hours -
Evalue-Ajomoro-Gwira MP kicks against VALCO sale
8 hours -
Mercy Johnson withdraws alleged defamation case against TikToker
9 hours -
Ghana accepted Trump’s deported West Africans and forced them back to their native countries
10 hours -
No evidence of theft in Unibank Case – A‑G explains withdrawal of charges against Dr Duffour
10 hours -
Labourer remanded for threatening to kill mother
10 hours -
Court remands farmer over GH¢110,000 car fraud
10 hours
