Accra, Feb.8,- The United State
Agency for International Development (USAID) and its partners have collaborated
to revive the private maternity sector in underserved areas of the country.
A statement issued in Accra on
Thursday by the US Embassy Press Attaché, Sara Veldhuizen Stealy, in Accra, said
the USAID and its partners had since 2014, worked to revive the private
maternity sector in underserved areas of the country.
The efforts made included working
with existing private maternity home owners and providing training and
assistance in both clinical and business skills.
It underscored the crucial role
that these private maternity homes played in the provision of maternal and
child health care, yet they had experienced a steady decline over the past
decade, as midwives had aged and therefore the facilities have to be closed
down.
The statement said the process of
revitalising private maternity involves transferring the ownership of declining
or closed facilities to younger midwives, who could make investments that would
increase capacity, improve quality, and expand important maternal child health
and family planning services in rural areas.
The USAID with its partners, it
said had also been working to assist private maternity homes to complete
ownership or management transformations designed to help the health facilities
survive the departure of the primary owner or midwife.
Ms Akua Kwateng-Addo, the USAID
and Ghana Health Office Director, who delivered opening remarks at a ceremony
to mark the transformation, praised the achievements for being “catalytic in
encouraging facilities to build a sound financial foundation, which ultimately
led to improved quality of services.”
She highlighted the importance of
public-private partnerships in light of Ghana’s Beyond Aid vision, saying,
“Given limited donor funds, it has become imperative to identify alternate and
innovative avenues for attracting resources and management expertise of the
private sector”.
The statement said the
development outcomes have shown promising results, with 88 per cent of surveyed
private maternity homes demonstrating an improvement in financial
sustainability, 92 percent indicating an improvement in the quality of clinical
services, and 22 facilities completing a “transformation” process.
This meant that the private
maternity home have taken critical steps to ensure financially sustainable
ownership and management.
The event included presentations,
poster exhibitions, and a panel discussion on revitalising the private
maternity sector in Ghana, and attracted dignitaries from both the public and
private sectors, including the Ministry of Health, Ghana Health Service and the
Ghana Registered Midwives Association.
GNA

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