17 Apr

We’ll support Ghana to achieve zero maternal death by 2030 – UNFPA

The United Nations Population Fund, UNFPA has given an assurance of its continued assistance to Ghana till the efforts at subduing maternal deaths and morbidity in Ghana is achieved. In this regard, the Fund and its partners will continue with the provision of the relevant support including technical and logistics in quality human resource training and maternal healthcare to ensure safe childbirth in Ghana.

From Left: Vice Chancellor of the KNUST, Professor Mrs. Rita Dickson in a warm embrace with Dr. Emmily Naphambo, Deputy Country Director of the UNFPA

 

The Deputy Country Director of the UNFPA, Dr. Emmily Naphambo, gave the assurance in Kumasi in an interview with GBC News on the sidelines of a presentation of assorted training equipment to the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. UNFPA is a UN agency working towards responsible reproductive health in member nations with a target to achieve Zero maternal deaths by 2030.

The training equipment donated to the KNUST forms part of the strategies being deployed by the UNFPA toward the attainment of this goal.

 

The Deputy Country Representative of the UNFPA, Dr. Emmily Naphambo, who led the delegation of the United Nations Agency, handed over the equipment to the Vice Chancellor of KNUST, Professor Mrs. Rita Dickson.

Dr. Naphambo explained that, until Ghana’s unimpressive maternal deaths record, which currently stands at 310 deaths per 100 thousand live births, gets better, the UNFPA, with the support of its partners like Canada, will not relent in assisting Ghana.

Dr. Emmily Naphambo, Deputy Country Director of the UNFPA

 

”As long as women continue to die, we’re here as UNFPA. UNFPA is a UN that specializes in reproductive health and maternal deaths. As long as women are dying, we’re here, we’re not going anywhere. Our agenda is to ensure Zero maternal deaths in 2030.”

The Director of Nursing and Midwifery at the Ministry of Health, Dr. Barnabas Yeboah who witnessed the presentation, said the Ministry has identified capacity building as the most important need for quality maternal care in Ghana.

Hence his appeal to local and external organizations to offer support in the development of relevant curricula for postgraduate programmes for Nurses and Midwives in Ghana.

The Deputy Registrar in charge of University Relations at the KNUST, Dr. Daniel Norris Bekoe, in thanking UNFPA for the generous assistance, described the gesture as timely for hands-on training of the would-be Nurses and Midwives during their practical learning sessions at School.

The equipment donated by the UNFPA, valued at 30 thousand Dollars included cardi otoscopy machine, multipurpose manual obstetrics bed, MVA kits, Urine dilators, sets of Dilation and Curettage, assorted Thermometers, cervical dilation and, effacement, birth simulators among others key logistics.

 

The items are meant for the Midwifery Skills Laboratory of the Department of Nursing of the College of Health Sciences of the KNUST.

The presentation forms part of the standing partnership between the KNUST and the UNFPA since 2011

 

By: Nicholas Osei-Wusu