Accra, Dec. 5, – The Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives
Association (GRNMA) has called on the Government to remove from office the
Principal of St. John of God Nursing Training College since he has no nursing
or midwifery background.
A communiqué issued by the GRNMA
at its 16th Biennial National Delegates’ Conference and copied to the Ghana
News Agency on Tuesday said the Principal must be removed from office latest by
January 1, 2018.
The St. John of God Nursing Training College
is located at Sefwi Asafo in the Western Region.
The communiqué, signed jointly by
Dr Kwaku Asante-Krobea, the President of the GRNMA and Mrs Perpetual
Ofori-Ampofo, the General Secretary, said: ‘’If he is still at post by the said
date, the GRNMA will advice itself.
“We recommend that future
appointees to that position must have nursing or midwifery background,’’ it
said.
The conference was on the theme:
"Overhauling Nursing and Midwifery Education: Prospects for
Professionalism and Quality Care".
The communiqué highlighted major
concerns of the GRNMA, which it appealed to the Government to act on with
immediate effect, which include the full implementation of the Collective
Agreement between GRNMA and its allies and the Ministry of Health (MOH) and its
agencies.
It said all allowances agreed
upon, including fuel allowance and rural incentive allowance, must be paid with
immediate effect.
It called on the MOH and its agencies to
adequately resource health facilities across the country with the necessary
logistics and human resource for the delivery of safe and quality health care.
“In this regard, we call on
government to employ graduate nurses and midwives who are still awaiting
engagement by the Ministry of Health and its agencies.
“We commend government for its
effort to reimburse service providers under the National Health Insurance
Scheme (NHIS); however the delay in the reimbursement is crippling some
hospitals and bringing in the menace of Cash and Carry system, which negatively
impacts patient care. We, therefore, entreat government to speed up the
reimbursement of health facilities with their NHIS claims.
“We also commend the Government
for retaining the Nursing and Midwifery Directorate at the Ministry of Health
per the request made by the GRNMA and its allies and call for expeditious
completion of the processes to make the nursing and midwifery directorate
permanent at the Ministry of Health and the Ghana Health Service.’’
The communiqué appealed to the
Government to phase out all the nursing and midwifery certificate programmes by
December, 2019 and upgrade all those in the system to the diploma level through
a well-structured programme to ensure the diploma level became the minimum
entry point into the nursing and midwifery professions.
It called on the MOH to fast
track the processes of getting accreditation for the Post Basic Midwives to be
awarded diploma certificates upon completion of their training.
The communiqué called on the MOH
to upgrade certificate nurses and midwives who successfully went through the
diploma programme to the grade of Senior Staff Nurse or Midwife.
It also called for the upgrading
of Senior Staff Nurses and Senior Staff Midwives who were serving officers and
pursuing degree programmes to be upgraded to Senior Nursing or Senior Midwifery
Officer.
The communiqué said the MOH and
its agencies should immediately release the results of the Deputy Directors of
Nursing Services promotion interviews conducted last year, which had been on
hold for the past year adding that government must pay all outstanding salary
arrears of nurses and midwives by March, 2018.
It said the state of mental health
in Ghana left much to be desired with the Mental Health Authority receiving
very little or no support.
“We, therefore, call on
government to make available adequate budgetary allocation to the Authority to
enable it to function fully and be in a better position to resource the only
three mental health facilities in the country and ensure the safety of nurses
taking care of the patients.
“The security of nurses and
midwives at their work places across the country has been compromised in recent
times. We, therefore, call on heads of health facilities to institute measures
that will ensure the safety of all health professionals, especially nurses and
midwives.
The communiqué said Community
Health Nurses got involved in many motor bike accidents in line of duty, which
resulted in precious lives being lost, and called on the MOH to insure all
motor bikes used by nurses and midwives in preventive healthcare and give them
the requisite training to save lives.
It called on the Government to
ensure the enforcement of sanitation laws in the country to improve on
sanitation in the cities and towns.
The communiqué urged the public
to go for regular medical check-ups and to be circumspect in the patronage of
herbal preparations, of which many had not been approved by the Food and Drugs
Authority.
GNA

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