Prime News Ghana

ACCRA: Korle Bu Teaching Hospital faces a possible shutdown in March

By Wendy Amarteifio
Korle Bu
ACCRA: Korle Bu Teaching Hospital faces a possible shutdown in March
Shares
facebook sharing button Share
twitter sharing button Tweet
email sharing button Email
sharethis sharing button Share

The Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Ghana's premier hospital is at risk of being shut down by March 31, 2019.

According to the Health Facilities Regulatory Authority (HeFRA), the body assigned to license health institutions in Ghana, Korle Bu operates without a valid license.

Nana Otuo Acheampong, Board Chairman of HeFra disclosed this during an inspection of some private and public health facilities in Accra.

The inspection forms part of a nationwide exercise to stop the operations of unlicensed health institutions for noncompliance.

Responding to the accusations of operating without a license, the CEO of Korle Bu, Dr. Daniel Asare, said they have started the process to get one.

“Everything is going to be done to get the needed accreditation,” adding that the institution is “almost halfway through the process.”

According to the registrar of HeFRA Mr Matthew Kyeremeh, Korle Bu is not the only health facility operating without a license. Obengfo Hospital is not registered too.  Mr Matthew Kyeremeh, registrar of HeFRA revealed this in 2018 when Miss Stacy Offei Darko, the Deputy CEO of the National Entrepreneurship Innovation Programme (NEIP) lost her life there.

READ ALSO: Nurse imposter revealed!

Board Chairman of HeFRA, Nana Acheampong, stated that “until Hefra came on the scene, public hospitals were regulated by the Ghana Health Service. And they did it very credibly. So it is the new law which is bringing them (health institutions) under HeFRA.”

He added that despite the act establishing HeFRA been passed in 2011, it was not until when the new government was formed in 2017 that the board was reconstituted after it had previously been dissolved.

“Regrettably there was a bit of a lorn between 2011 and 2017 when the new government came on. So it was in April 2017 that HeFRA stated working. Before then even the board had been dissolved.”

The board chairman has hinted that health institutions have up to March 31 to comply with the regularization or risk being shut down.

HeFRA operates under the Ministry of Health and is assigned under the part one of the Health Institutions and Facilities Act, 2011(Act 829), to license and monitor facilities for the provision of public and private health services.

Ghana News: Latest news in Ghana