Ghana Medical Association — professional organization representing doctors and health professionals that advocates for healthcare infrastructure, supports striking medical staff, and promotes preventive health initiatives.
… Paul Ossei Sampene, a medical doctor, Fellow of the German Academy of Pathology, and member of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), has defended the inclusion of names in the investigative report into the death of engineer Charles Amissah, insisting it should not be interpreted a …
Dr Justice Yamson, a lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), has described Ghana’s emergency healthcare system as deeply inadequate, warning that persistent systemic weaknesses continue to cost lives. …
Dr Justice Yankson, a lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), has described Ghana’s emergency healthcare system as deeply inadequate, warning that persistent systemic weaknesses continue to cost lives. …
Lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Dr Justice Yamson, has suggested that accountability for failures in Ghana’s emergency response chain must include the Ambulance Service, following renewed scrutiny of how emergency patients such as Charl …
Lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Dr Justice Yamson, has called for urgent action to identify and apprehend the driver involved in the incident that led to the death of Charles Amissah, insisting that accountability must extend beyond hos …
… The Ghana Medical Association has called for a comprehensive overhaul of the emergency care system, citing poor coordination, weak ambulance-to-hospital communication and the absence of a centralised bed tracking system. …
President of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Prof. Ernest Yorke, is calling for a comprehensive national emergency healthcare policy to address persistent challenges within Ghana’s health system, particularly the ongoing “no bed syndrome”. …
President of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Prof. Dr Ernest Yorke, has described comments suggesting that frustrated health professionals should resign as “unfortunate”, insisting that Ghana’s healthcare challenges require support and reforms rather than blame. …
… Ernest Yorke, President of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), has expressed concern over what he said are threats to medical doctors mentioned in the report of the investigations into the death of Charles Amissah. …
… Reacting to a statement from the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Mr Boafo acknowledged the importance of addressing broader systemic challenges but maintained that individual responsibility must not be ignored. …
Political analyst Dr Arthur Kobina Kennedy has described Ghana's inability to address recurring flooding as evidence of a deeper crisis in democratic governance, arguing that successive governments have failed to translate promises into practical solutions to problems that threaten lives and livelihoods.
Political analyst Dr Arthur Kobina Kennedy has described Ghana's inability to address recurring flooding as evidence of a deeper crisis in democratic governance, arguing that successive governments have failed to translate promises into practical solutions to problems that threaten lives and livelihoods.
Dr Justice Yankson, a lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, has called on the Attorney-General's Department to ensure fairness, transparency and public accountability in any plea bargaining arrangement involving Ashanti Regional NPP Chairman Bernard Antwi Boasiako in his ongoing criminal case. Yankson stressed that while plea bargaining is a lawful feature of Ghana's criminal justice system, the process must be conducted in a manner that inspires public confidence and serves the broader interests of justice.
An opinion piece examines the Health Minister's two-week suspension of the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital CEO pending investigations into denial of emergency admissions, framing it as a case study in leadership accountability and institutional governance within Ghana's healthcare system.
The Komfo Anokye Doctors' Association has suspended its industrial action following intervention by Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II and other stakeholders, allowing medical services to resume at the hospital. The association said it remains committed to resolving the issues that triggered the strike while prioritizing patient care and public health.
Doctors at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital have suspended their industrial action following discussions involving the Asantehene, hospital board, and management. The association said it prioritized patient care and the broader public interest while remaining committed to resolving the issues that sparked the strike.
Ghana's Minority Caucus has called for the immediate reinstatement of the Chief Executive Officer of Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, arguing that his suspension does not address the deep-rooted structural challenges responsible for the persistent "No Bed Syndrome" in Ghana's healthcare system. The Caucus maintains that the crisis extends far beyond a single hospital administrator and reflects broader weaknesses including inadequate infrastructure, weak referral mechanisms, and workforce shortages.
Ghana's health minister recommended the suspension of Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital's CEO, Dr. Paa Kwesi Baidoo, following the temporary closure of the hospital's Accident and Emergency Centre, which was reopened within 24 hours after measures to address severe congestion were implemented.
The National Labour Commission has directed the Komfo Anokye Doctors' Association to suspend its indefinite strike, which began June 6, 2026, citing violations of the Labour Act. The commission has summoned the parties to a hearing on June 10, 2026.
Parliament's minority caucus has called for the immediate reinstatement of Dr Paa Kwesi Baidoo, CEO of Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, whose suspension the group characterizes as political scapegoating. The ranking member on the health committee argues the "No Bed Syndrome" at KATH stems from deeper infrastructure and resource allocation problems rather than leadership failure.
Nurses and midwives at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital have threatened to join an ongoing doctors' strike from June 7 unless the suspension of the hospital's Chief Executive Officer is reversed, arguing the suspension will not address the hospital's structural and logistical challenges.
The Ghana Medical Association has called for the immediate reinstatement of the suspended Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) CEO, arguing that the hospital's temporary closure of its Accident and Emergency Centre due to overcrowding was a professionally appropriate patient safety measure. The GMA warned that continued confrontations between government and health professionals could destabilize the sector.
The Ghana Medical Association has given full support to striking doctors at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital and demanded the government reinstate the hospital's suspended CEO within three working days, describing the suspension as "without basis" and defending KATH management's decision to temporarily halt new emergency admissions as consistent with best practice in patient safety.
The Ghana Medical Association has warned that recent congestion at KATH's Accident and Emergency Centre reflects systemic underfunding of emergency care infrastructure nationwide, and called for sustained investment and urgent expansion of emergency facilities across the health system.
The Ghana Medical Association says Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital did not turn away emergency patients during recent congestion at its A&E Centre, but took temporary measures to redistribute patients to peripheral facilities and manage overcrowding while maintaining care quality.
Health professionals in Ghana are intensifying calls for stronger preventive healthcare, warning that the country's growing dependence on curative treatment is placing enormous pressure on the health system. The Ghana Medical Association organised a Bi-Annual Wellness Walk under a Preventive and Promotive Primary Health Care agenda to create awareness about healthy living and disease prevention, particularly regarding non-communicable diseases.
The Ghana Medical Association has announced psychological, psychiatric, and legal support for health professionals implicated in the Charles Amissah case, following a committee report that found lapses and delays in emergency care contributed to his death. GMA President Ernest Yorke stated the association will ensure affected workers receive adequate support while due process continues.
The President of the Ghana Medical Association has called on healthcare professionals to improve communication with patients and families, arguing that stronger engagement is essential to restoring public confidence in Ghana's health system. He stressed that many public complaints stem from poor communication rather than lack of medical attention.
The Ghana Medical Association president has questioned the use of "medical negligence" in an investigative committee's report on engineer Charles Amissah's death, arguing that such determinations exceed the authority of a non-judicial body. The committee found that delays in treatment and repeated referrals between health facilities, rather than the accident itself, contributed to the 29-year-old's death.
The Ghana Medical Association, working with partners including the Junior Doctors Association of Ghana, launched a biannual wellness walk in Accra on May 9, 2026, to promote physical activity and preventive healthcare as a way to reduce non-communicable diseases. GMA President Ernest Yorke and other health officials called for public education on lifestyle changes, emphasizing that prevention through regular exercise and better diet is key to disease control.
Dr Justice Yankson, a former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, has attributed significant responsibility for the death of 29-year-old Charles Amissah to the Ghana National Ambulance Service, arguing that proper pre-hospital medical intervention—including bleeding control and compression techniques—was not provided on scene or during transport, and that proper documentation and protocols were not followed.
Prof. Paul Ossei Sampene defended the inclusion of names in an investigative report into engineer Charles Amissah's death, stating it should not be seen as scapegoating health professionals. The report concluded Amissah died from delayed emergency care and medical neglect rather than initial accident injuries, and Sampene stressed the findings point to broader institutional challenges.
Dr Justice Yamson, a former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, has described Ghana's emergency healthcare system as deeply inadequate and warned that systemic weaknesses continue to cost lives. He cited persistent issues like the "no-bed syndrome" affecting hospitals nationwide, noting that successive health ministers have been made aware but insufficient action has followed.
Dr Justice Yankson, a lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, has described Ghana's emergency healthcare system as deeply inadequate, citing persistent systemic weaknesses including "no-bed syndrome" that continue to cost lives. His remarks follow an official investigative report into the death of engineer Charles Amissah, which found he remained alive and treatable during multiple hospital referrals before eventually dying without intervention.
Dr Justice Yamson, a lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, has argued that accountability for failures in Ghana's emergency response chain must include the Ambulance Service, citing weaknesses in coordination between pre-hospital care and hospital admission that contribute to avoidable deaths. An investigation into Charles Amissah's death exposed serious gaps in Ghana's emergency healthcare system, including delayed referrals and medical neglect, prompting renewed calls for urgent reforms.
Dr Justice Yamson, a lawyer and former General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, has called for urgent action to identify and apprehend the driver involved in the incident that led to Charles Amissah's death, arguing that accountability should extend beyond hospital failures to the person who caused the initial accident.
Dr Kingsley Agyemang, MP for Abuakwa South, has rejected comments by Parliamentary Health Committee Chairman Mark Kurt Nawaane suggesting that health workers unable to cope with the profession's demands should resign, calling the remarks "unfortunate" and warning they risk demoralising overstretched professionals. His statement follows an investigation into the death of Charles Amissah, a 29-year-old engineer who died after being turned away by multiple hospitals in Accra due to claims of unavailable beds.
Prof. Ernest Yorke, president of the Ghana Medical Association, is calling for a comprehensive national emergency healthcare policy to address the "no bed syndrome" and other persistent challenges in Ghana's health system. The GMA has submitted proposals to the Professor Agyeman Badu Akosa Committee and says it stands ready to support government reform efforts.
Ghana Medical Association President Prof. Dr Ernest Yorke called comments suggesting frustrated health professionals resign "unfortunate," arguing that Ghana's healthcare challenges require support and reforms rather than blame. He noted that Ghana already faces a shortage of healthcare professionals, particularly in deprived communities, and losing trained personnel would worsen the situation.
The Ghana Medical Association has expressed concern over threats to medical doctors named in an investigation into Charles Amissah's death, with the GMA President saying the doctors have been exposed to public hostility, online harassment, and threats following the report's public release. He described the decision to publicly identify the doctors as "unfortunate" and argued there were better ways to handle the matter without exposing them.
Former COCOBOD Head of Public Affairs Fiifi Boafo has urged a balanced approach following the investigative report into Charles Amissah's death, calling for both structural reforms in Ghana's healthcare system and scrutiny of individuals involved, while warning against the report gathering dust without action.