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GHS receives first consignment of vaccines for babies The first consignment of baby vaccines of Bacillus Calmette - Guér...
13/03/2023

GHS receives first consignment of vaccines for babies

The first consignment of baby vaccines of Bacillus Calmette - Guérin (BCG), Measles-Rubella (MR), and Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) have been received by the Ministry of Health and the Ghana Health Service on Saturday, March 11.

This comes days after the sector minister, Kwaku Agyemang-Manu, assured the nation on the floor of Parliament about the shipment of the vaccines.

“Mr. Speaker, it is a very serious public interest issue, the assurance I will give and I can give for the first time in the chamber here is that this will not happen again,”

“I will advise that you will help me in my advocacy to get adequate funding for vaccines, even the health insurance budget. So when we meet with committees, they have always been talking about it, and even in the chamber, it has come up that if Parliament approves adequately for us and we always have our budget well we will be able to supply. I assure you that whatever challenges happened I don’t think we are going to face these challenges any longer.

“I can stand here and assure the House that within two weeks or three weeks we will get vaccines, even probably before that. I can’t get my hands on a specific date but probably even before that, we may get the vaccines that we are talking about. Throughout the period we have made 6.4 million dollars equivalent to UNICEF which supplies us the vaccines.”

Meanwhile, Tamale Teaching Hospital has reportedly recorded 5 suspected measles death.

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24 MILLION ADULTS IN AFRICA ARE CURRENTLY LIVING WITH DIABETES.Africa’s diabetes statistics illustrate the depth of the ...
29/11/2022

24 MILLION ADULTS IN AFRICA ARE CURRENTLY LIVING WITH DIABETES.

Africa’s diabetes statistics illustrate the depth of the challenge; 24 million adults are currently living with diabetes, with that number predicted to swell by 129% to 55 million by 2045.

The World Health Organization (WHO) Representative to Ghana, Mr. Francis Kasolo disclosed this in a statement read on his behalf by Dr. Elizabeth Juma at Ghana’s commemoration of the 2022 World Diabetes Day, organised by the Ministry of Health and Ghana Health Service, said diabetes mellitus took the lives of 416,000 people on the continent and is forecast to become one of the leading causes of death in Africa by 2030.

Mr. Kasolo said Diabetes is the only major non-communicable disease for which the risk of dying early is increasing, rather than decreasing.

He said epidemiological trends were reflected in Ghana as Type-2 Diabetes affected approximately six percent of adults, a percentage that is expected to rise.

The WHO Representative said the known factors include family history and increasing age, along with modifiable risk factors such as overweight and obesity, sedentary lifestyles, unhealthy diets, smoking and alcohol abuse.

The commemoration was aimed at raising awareness of the growing burden of diabetes and strategies to prevent and manage the threat on the theme: “Access to Diabetes Education”.

Hon. Tina Mensah, Deputy Minister for Health who launched the commemoration, said the increase in Ghana’s population growth with increasing life expectancy, rapid urbanization and adoption of a sedentary lifestyle over the past few decades, has played a vital role in the increasing burden of non-communicable diseases including diabetes.

She said studies conducted in Ghana estimate the prevalence of diabetes to be between 2.6% – 9%. Ghana Health Service records an average of 200,000 cases of diabetes reported to health facilities annually.

“Although the direct cost care is covered by National Health Insurance, extra costs in terms of nutritional support are borne by the patient, his/her families and/or provides through out-of-pocket payments” she added.

Hon. Tina called on health development partners to join hands with the government to control the rate of Diabetes infection in Ghana.

Dr. Efua Commeh, Acting Programme Manager, Non-communicable Diseases, Ghana Health Service, said Diabetes affected a significant number of children, many of whom were not recognised.

“Children with this condition will live with it for a very long time and it will affect productivity. Moreover, there are many who walk around with the condition without knowing about it,” she noted.

Dr. Commeh said Ghana Health Service records over 200,000 cases at Out Patient Department of health facilities annually and diabetes is now number seven in Ghana.






Medical Product Alert N°5/2022: DIPRIVAN .Falsified DIPRIVAN (Propofol) identified in WHO region of the AmericasThis WHO...
29/08/2022

Medical Product Alert N°5/2022: DIPRIVAN .

Falsified DIPRIVAN (Propofol) identified in WHO region of the Americas

This WHO Medical Product Alert refers to falsified DIPRIVAN (propofol), identified in Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) in July 2022 and reported to WHO in August 2022.DIPRIVAN is indicated for use as a short-acting intravenous general anaesthetic during diagnostic and surgical procedures, and for the sedation of ventilated patients.Genuine DIPRIVAN is manufactured by ASTRAZENECA for ASPEN. Both ASPEN and ASTRAZENECA have confirmed that the products referenced in this Alert are falsified on the basis that they deliberately/fraudulently misrepresent their identity and source.

DIPRIVAN is manufactured for the Latin American market and is authorized for local use by several countries including Colombia, Dominican Rep, and Ecuador.
The stated Lot numbers are falsified and have never been issued for DIPRIVAN.Printing and spelling errors have also been identified and the fill line is potentially inconsistent among the identified vials.The safety, sterility, and quality of the falsified products referenced in this alert are unknown.

DIPRIVAN is administered intravenously and used to sedate patients. These falsified products may therefore pose a particular high risk to patients. It is important to detect and remove these falsified products from circulation to prevent harm to patients.Advice to regulatory authorities and the public
WHO requests increased surveillance and diligence within the supply chains of countries and regions likely to be affected by these falsified products.

All medical products must be approved and obtained from authorized/licensed suppliers. The products’ authenticity and physical condition should be carefully checked. Seek advice from a healthcare professional when in doubt.If you are in possession of these falsified products, please do not use them.

If you have used these products, or you suffered an adverse reaction/event after use, you are advised to seek immediate medical advice from a qualified healthcare professional and report the incident to the National Regulatory Authority or National Pharmacovigilance Centre.

National regulatory/health authorities are advised to immediately notify WHO if these falsified products are discovered in their country.






President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has launched an international Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Compact 2022-2030 t...
22/08/2022

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has launched an international Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Compact 2022-2030 to accelerate progress towards the prevention and control of NCD’s.

The roadmap enjoins all countries to hasten and improve their responses to the implementation of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDG’s) target 3.4 that seeks to reduce by one-third premature mortality from NDC’s through prevention and treatment, and the promotion of mental health and wellbeing by 2030.
The Compact will galvanize action to close the implementation gap and fulfil five specific, time-bound obligations. Those commitments, which must be fulfilled by 2030, include saving the lives of some 50 million people from dying prematurely of NDC’s, protecting the lives of 1.7 million people living with NCD’s during humanitarian emergencies.

It would also involve the covering all people with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable, and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technology for the prevention and control of NCDs, covering all countries with comprehensive NCD surveillance and monitoring actions and engaging 1.7 million people living with NCD’s and mental health conditions to encourage governments to develop more ambitious national NCD responses.

The President launched the initiative at the maiden high-level International Strategic Dialogue on Non-Communicable Diseases held in Accra on Tuesday. He also launched an informal International Group of Heads of State and Government to hasten the implementation of the commitments made in the UN Political Declarations of 2011, 2014 and 2018 High-Level Meetings of the General Assembly on the Prevention and Control of NCDs.

Ghana, Norway and the World Health Organization (WHO) co-hosted the Dialogue, which aimed among other things take decisive and comprehensive action on NCDs and achieving the target of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to reduce untimely deaths from NCD’s that causes nearly five times as many deaths as communicable diseases worldwide.

The Dialogue brought together national and international actors and partners to exchange knowledge and ideas with key stakeholders from the private and public sectors, the academia, business world and international development experts.

According to the WHO, 21 million die annually from NDC’s, equivalent to 71% of all deaths globally. Each year, more than 15 million people between the ages of 30 and 69 years die from an NCD; 85% of these “premature” deaths occur in Low- and Middle-Income Countries. Cardiovascular Diseases account for most NCD deaths, or 17.9 million people annually, followed by Cancers (9.3 million), respiratory diseases (4.1 million), and Diabetes (1.5 million). These four groups of diseases account for over 80% of all premature NCD deaths and share similar risk factors (To***co use, physical inactivity, the harmful use of alcohol and unhealthy diets.

In an address read for him by the Presidential Advisor on Health, Dr Anthony Nsiah-Asare, President Akufo-Addo noted that NCDs had changed the world, becoming the leading cause of death in many countries, emphasizing that the trend would worsen unless drastic action was taken.

He noted that the COVID-19 pandemic had also exposed the link of non-communicable diseases with vulnerability to severe COVID illness, suggesting that that “must drive new approaches if we really want to make meaningful headway with NCDs Prevention and Control.”
The President observed that pandemic largely succeeded in diverting attention off other disease burdens that are equally affecting people and the society with immediate, and more importantly, grave future socio-economic consequences.

“I am talking about Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) otherwise known as the “Silent Killer “.
He said the situation in Ghana was not too different from that of any other Lower Middle-Income Country.
According to available data from the NCD Programme of the Ghana Health Service, on the average 1 out of every 5 clients who visited the out-patient department was diagnosed with one form of NCDs or the other. 16.7% of OPD attendees in 2017 were diagnosed with an NCD, rising to 19.7% in 2021. Reported counts of selected NCDs at the OPD in the last 5 years from 2017 hypertension, diabetes mellitus, road traffic accidents, asthma, stroke, depression, breast cancer and cervical cancer.

President Akufo-Addo told the meeting that the current burden of NDC’s demanded that “we need to as a people redouble our collective and individual efforts at reversing the trend which could threaten our national development”
He said his government through the Ministry of Health and its agencies in collaboration with other Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) and with support from Development Partners have revised the National Non communicable Disease Policy (NNCDP, 2022) with its accompanying Strategy for the Prevention and Control of Non communicable Diseases (2022-2026).

The Policy framework would provide the direction and guidance for all NCD interventions in the country.
The President pointed out Ghana had revised its Essential Health Service Package and aligned it to a Life course approach and the different components of health-Promotive, Preventive, Curative, Rehabilitative and Palliative services- for a responsive and high-quality health service delivery for all.
“Our goal as a nation, therefore, is to ensure that the burden of NCDs is reduced to the barest minimum to render it of little or no public health importance and as an obstacle to socio-economic development,” he told the meeting.

Ghana’s national fight against NCD’s, President Akufo-Addo indicated, would be concentrated on health promotion, physical inactivity, alcohol use and abuse, to***co Use, diet and nutrition, immunizations, screening and early detection, clinical care, rehabilitation and palliative care.

He stated that special attention would also be given to cancers of all forms, injuries, Sickle Cell Disease, Mental Health, Oral Health and Eye Health.
The President said the country’s health system was being strengthened with the provision of the necessary client-centred infrastructure and logistics.

He made reference to the ambitious Agenda 111 project, that aims to provide 101 districts that do not have a hospital with one and build six regional hospitals for the six newly created regions and an extra regional hospital for the Western Region, to improve access to care and make Ghana, a centre of medical excellence and a preferred destination for medical tourism.

“Additionally, the government is also working hard at providing the necessary technologies and assistive systems for convenient access to and delivery of care, adopt innovative and sustainable ways of financing health, strengthen research and evidence generation and an empowered regulatory mechanism to ensure and assure quality of care for all people living in Ghana,” he said.

President Akufo-Addo called the attention of the gathering to the fact that sustaining an impactful fight against NCDs would demand the redefining national development philosophies that aspired to achieve the highest possible quality of Life for its people.

He also harped on the need to activate a Multisectoral Governance Framework for broad determinants of Health as part of an integral part of national Planning.
“This will require leadership, coordinated multi-stakeholder engagement for health both at the government level and at the level of a wide range of actors, health-in-all policies and whole-of-government approaches across sectors and partnership, with relevant civil society and private sector entities.”
The President urged his counterparts to endeavour to fulfill the commitments made for the prevention and control of NCDs.

“We need to identify new ways to strengthen collaborations in resourcing, knowledge-sharing and technical assistance for bolder national NCD response… This response will accelerate the implementation of the commitments made in the UN Political Declarations of 2011, 2014 and 2018 High-Level Meetings of the General Assembly on the Prevention and Control of NCDs.

“Let us put our shoulders to the wheel and reverse the worrying trend of NCDs in our respective countries. This is achievable with the right political commitments, the right systems and structures, development partner support and citizens involvement.,” he added.

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General underscored the need for countries to adopt cost effective actions to reduce the burden of NCD’s.
He said with the right strategic investments, countries facing the challenge of premature deaths from NCD’s “can change course.”
They could do this by focusing on a few areas including to***co and alcohol control, reducing salt intake, increasing physical activity, management of hypertension, diabetes and vaccination against human papilloma virus.

“In fact, more than seven million lives can be saved for 84 cents per person per year from now until 2030. This investment would realise more than 270 billion dollars in economic and societal benefits and avert nearly ten million heart attacks and strokes, all by 2030,” he stressed.
Dr Ghebreyesus noted that overcoming the challenge of NCD’s required technical, financial and political commitment.
He enjoined Heads of States and Governments to sign onto the NCD Compact and make the commitment needed to make global progress in the prevention and control of NCD’s.

Other dignitaries who spoke at the event including Ghana’s First Lady, Mrs Rebecca Akufo-Addo, the First Lady of Congo, Antoinette Sassou Nguesso, and the Prime Minister of Norway who addressed the gathering virtually.






Monkeypox cases top 35,000: WHO Monkeypox infections continue to rise globally, with more than 35,000 cases across 92 co...
18/08/2022

Monkeypox cases top 35,000: WHO

Monkeypox infections continue to rise globally, with more than 35,000 cases across 92 countries and territories, and 12 deaths, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) reported on Wednesday.

“Almost 7,500 cases were reported last week, a 20 per cent increase over the previous week, which was also 20 per cent more than the week before,” said WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, speaking during his regular press briefing from Geneva.

The majority of cases are being reported from Europe and the Americas, and mostly among men who have s*x with men.

S*X WITH ME ????






Ukraine war: WHO says attacks on health facilities are rising dailyThere have been more than 70 separate attacks on hosp...
28/03/2022

Ukraine war: WHO says attacks on health facilities are rising daily

There have been more than 70 separate attacks on hospitals, ambulances and doctors in Ukraine with the number increasing on a "daily basis", says the World Health Organization (WHO).

It says the targeting of healthcare facilities has become part of the strategy and tactics of modern warfare.

A recent casualty on 8 March was the newly refurbished central hospital in Izyum, south of Kharkiv.

It was hit by what the Ukrainian authorities said were Russian shells.

Video and photos posted online by the city's deputy mayor showed extensive damage to the main hospital building. A new reception area built last year was completely destroyed.

The footage has been verified by the BBC and other media outlets, although the exact circumstances of the attack are impossible to establish at this time.

"After the first bombing, the windows of the hospital blew out," the deputy mayor Volodymyr Matsokin told the BBC.

A second attack destroyed the hospital's operating rooms, he added.
That day hospital staff were treating children, pregnant women and three newborn babies as well as soldiers and civilians injured in fierce fighting in the region, according to the Ukrainian authorities.

They were sheltering in the basement at the time of the attack and no-one was killed.

"The government had invested millions to provide good facilities with modern equipment," said Mr Matsokin.

"Patients had to climb out of the rubble on their own to escape."

The BBC has contacted the Russian embassy in London about the attack but has received no response, although in the past Moscow has denied deliberately targeting civilians.

Since 24 February, the WHO has reviewed and verified 72 separate attacks on healthcare facilities in Ukraine causing at least 71 deaths and 37 injuries.

Most have damaged hospitals, medical transports and supply stores, but the WHO has also recorded the "probable" abduction or detention of healthcare staff and patients.

"We are concerned that this number is increasing daily," the WHO's Ukraine country representative Jarno Habicht told the BBC.

"Health facilities should be safe places for both doctors and nurses, but also patients to turn to for treatment. This should not happen."

Because the war in Ukraine is an international armed conflict between two states, the Geneva Conventions apply.

Expanded in the aftermath of World War Two, the conventions set out the basic rights of civilians and military personnel, and establish protection for the wounded and sick. They were ratified by what was then the Soviet Union in 1954.

Under Article 18 of the Conventions, civilian hospitals "may in no circumstances be the object of attack, but shall at all times be respected and protected".

A breach of that rule can be investigated by the International Criminal Court in the Hague and, if found to be a war crime, individual perpetrators can be prosecuted and punished.

There are though exemptions to the Conventions.

The protection from attack is lost if the medical facility is placed near a legitimate military target or is thought to be committing an act "harmful to the enemy".

According to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), that could include the use of a hospital as a shield for healthy fighters or the staging of a medical unit in a position which impedes an enemy attack.

Neve Gordon, professor of international law and human rights at Queen Mary University of London, said: "What we have today, in effect, is a situation where hospitals and medical units have become fair game.

"If there are soldiers outside the hospital or it is simply next to a train station, it can be attacked. Or it could be that a wounded soldier has a cellphone and is calling other troops and telling them that there is someone nearby.

"All these loopholes render it possible to claim the attack was legitimate."

The ICRC says that, in theory, before targeting a hospital which might be in breach of those rules, the attacking side should always give a warning, with a time limit, and the other side must have ignored that warning.

There is no evidence this has happened in the Ukraine conflict.

Prof Gordon would like to see a far stronger blanket ban on any attack on medical facilities under international law, similar to the ban on torture adopted by the United Nations which came into force in 1987.

Exemptions to the Geneva Conventions have been used to justify attacks on hospitals and medical units in post-World War Two conflicts from Korea and Vietnam onwards.

The trend though appears to be accelerating rapidly, driven in part by the use of ballistic missiles, drones, and other longer range munitions.

The US advocacy group Physicians for Human Rights claims that Russian or local forces have been linked to at least 244 separate attacks on healthcare facilities in Syria since 2011.

At one point, the charity Médecins Sans Frontières even made the decision to stop sharing the GPS co-ordinates of some health clinics it operated with the Syrian government or its Russian allies, amid concerns they were more likely to become direct targets as a result.

Russian officials denied deliberately attacking hospitals in Syria and suggested "jihadists" in the country were routinely sheltering in protected civilian buildings.

The WHO is concerned that all this means attacks on medical facilities are fast becoming part of the wider "strategy and tactics" of modern warfare, regardless of the Geneva Conventions rules.

Destroying health facilities, it warned, "is about the destruction of hope" and the denial of basic human rights.

"We've never seen globally... this rate of attacks on healthcare," its emergencies director Michael Ryan told a news conference this week.

"This crisis is reaching a point where the health system in Ukraine is teetering on the brink.

"It needs to be supported… but how can you do that if the very infrastructure that those people will go in to support is under direct attack?"





Ghana records 266,000 abortions in 4 years.A newly released model of estimates for pregnancies and abortions in the worl...
28/03/2022

Ghana records 266,000 abortions in 4 years.

A newly released model of estimates for pregnancies and abortions in the world shows that some 266,000 abortions were done in Ghana within four years.

The Guttmacher Institute, the World Health Organisation and the UN’s Human Reproduction Programme (HRP) released the first-ever model-based estimates of unintended pregnancy and abortion rates for 150 countries, highlighting major disparities in access to s*xual and reproductive health care.

The study analyses rates from 2015 to 2019, with the aim of providing deeper insights into access to s*xual and reproductive health services in countries of all income levels across the globe.

In Ghana, the unintended pregnancy rate declined 14 per cent between 1990-1994 and 2015-2019, it said during the same period, the abortion rate increased 35 per cent with the share of unintended pregnancy ending in abortion rising from 23 per cent to 36 per cent.

It said pregnancy outcomes in Ghana in 2015-2019 recorded a total of 1.33 million annually with 741,000 being unintended and 266,000 ending in abortion, which is legal only to preserve the pregnant person’s health.

Dr. Herminia Palacio, President and CEO of the Guttmacher Institute, said, “To build s*xual and reproductive health policies that are truly inclusive and equitable, we need to understand what is happening at a country level.”

“Having current and reliable data at hand will not only help identify and find solutions to disparities, but also make a case for smarter investments that deliver impact.”

Alongside the estimates, Guttmacher, a leading research and policy entity committed to advancing global s*xual and reproductive health, has published more detailed country profiles to allow decision makers and health advocates to better understand and act on s*xual and reproductive health needs in their countries, particularly for family planning, including contraception and comprehensive abortion care.

The new estimates indicate that unintended pregnancy and abortion rates vary widely between countries—even within the same region or geographic area.

The greatest variations were found in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, where for instance, unintended pregnancy rates in countries ranged from 41 to 107 per 1000 women, and 49 to 145 per 1000 women respectively.

These disparities are not shaped purely by income-level in Europe, for example, most countries with higher unintended pregnancy rates than the regional average are classified as high-income, while the two countries with the lowest estimates are middle-income.

This finding reflects how barriers to accessing and using effective s*xual and reproductive healthcare exist in settings with greater as well as fewer resources.

“These variations speak to the need for investment, even in regions with low unintended pregnancy rates, that empowers women and girls across countries to choose under what circumstances they want to have children,” says Jonathan Bearak, a senior research scientist at Guttmacher Institute and lead author of the article.

“The proportion of unintended pregnancies ending in abortion—as great as 68 per cent, even among countries that completely prohibited abortion—illustrates the strength of the desire of millions of women and adolescents to avoid unplanned childbearing.”

While the estimates go a long way in increasing the quality of evidence available, there remains a pressing need for more and better data. The availability of reliable abortion data varied substantially by region, ranging from 12 percent of countries in Western Asia and Northern Africa to 73 per cent of countries in Europe and Northern America.

With additional investments in country data collection, it would be possible to make estimates with greater certainty, monitor trends and possibly assess the impact of large-scale programmes in the future.

Sexual and reproductive health and rights are an essential part of universal health coverage and are required to end discrimination against women and girls. These country-level estimates highlight the importance of equitable investment in comprehensive s*xual and reproductive health care, and will further inform countries working to implement WHO’s new guidelines for quality abortion services.

“For good health, people in countries around the world need access to a comprehensive package of s*xuality education, accurate family planning information and services, as well as quality abortion care,” said Dr. Bela Ganatra, who leads WHO’s Prevention of Unsafe Abortion unit.

“This research aims to support countries as they work to strengthen the lifesaving services they provide for s*xual and reproductive health and improve health outcomes – especially for women and girls.”





Takyikrom: Pregnant women are carried on doors to access nearby health facilitiesThe Chief of Takyikrom in the Achiase d...
21/03/2022

Takyikrom: Pregnant women are carried on doors to access nearby health facilities

The Chief of Takyikrom in the Achiase district of the Eastern Region, Nana Nyarko has given a worrying account of how expectant mothers in the area are often carried on broken doors to access healthcare at the nearby Aprade community.

According to the Chief, the Aprade community is about one mile from Takyikrom and pregnant women have to be carried on the shoulders of young men to access healthcare because of the lack of hospital facilities in the area as well as the state of bad roads in the area.

He noted that anytime pregnant women are due, their husbands have to organize some young men for the door of a building to be collapsed for use as a platform to carry the expectant mother to the nearby town.

He added that this has been the norm in the area because the health centre put up by the community had two nurses who do not live in the area. “So when there are such issues in the night carrying the expectant mothers is the only way out,” he said.

Nana Nyarko speaking on the plight of his people in an interview with Kwame Obeng Sarkodie on the Ghana Yensom morning show on Accra 100.5 FM, Thursday, March 16, 2022 explained that the community with about 500 residents have no CHPS or healthcare facility.

He said the existing dilapidated healthcare centre is not fit for purpose and was put up by the community through communal labour.

A land that has been made available to the Assembly for the construction of a CHP centre is lying fallow,” he bemoaned.

He noted that the concerns of the people have been tabled with the Assembly but there has not been any proper response.

The Assemblyman for Aprade Electoral Area (Railways Station), Anaman Wilberforce corroborated the Chief’s claims adding that steps are being taken for the needs of the area to be addressed by the Assembly.

For his part, the District Chief Executive (DCE) for Achiase District Assembly, Richard Amponsah noted that steps are being taken to address the problems of the area.

“It is in view of this that nurses are posted every week to the existing health centre even although it is not in the best of shape,” he admitted.

According to him, the Assembly is barely two years old adding that steps are being taken to have some of these challenges in such areas addressed.

He advised expectant mothers in the area not to wait till they are due before heading to the nearby health centre to seek assistance.

He called on the Chief and Assemblyman to desist from petty politicking and support the Assembly to deliver on its mandate to the people of the district.





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