The Bank of Ghana Hospital is now officially fully operational.
The establishment of the hospital can be traced to a vision by the governor of the Bank of Ghana in 1987 to serve the growing number of patients seen at the Bank Clinic.
However, the hospital’s completion was delayed due to changes in government over the years.
Taking over the new management of the bank of Ghana in 2017, the current governor, Dr. Ernest Addison, inherited three hospital projects at different stages of completion.
The 65-bed capacity hospital is estimated to cost 80 million Euros.
The governor of the Bank of Ghana Dr. Ernest Addison says the hospital will be of good use to the public.
“This was expected to expand the infrastructural gains of the hospital and adequately cater for the growing population, provide quality healthcare services and create a congenial environment.”
Speaking at the commisssioning, Health Minister, Kwaku Agyeman Manu, said the hospital will help the government achieve Universal Health Coverage.
“What we have done here, as I said, will complement the government’s efforts. We have done a roadmap to ensure that we achieve Universal Health coverage by the year 2030 as anticipated. Ghana seems to be a little bit ahead of achieving the UN project. In our roadmap we are talking about giving care affordably, easy access, getting hospitals closer to people and that is what drives the President’s agenda 111 that is trying to put up hospitals where people are situated.”
Deputy Finance Minister, John Kumah lauded the project, noting the ultramodern edifice will reduce the seeking of medical care abroad.
“By the opportunity that this Hospital offers to the ordinary Ghanaian to receive the best of healthcare facility in our country, a facility of Global standard. One issue that this country has been grappling with is sometimes when leaders have to be flown out of our country to receive certain standards of health attention, and we believe that the BoG hospital has come such an important time to solve that.”
source: citinewsroom