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Doctors On Strike: Emergency Services Fully Disrupted
 
By:
Sat, 8 Aug 2015   ||   Ghana, Accra
 

In the bid to further press in their demands, doctors in Ghana have stopped providing emergency services in a strike over their conditions of service.

Out-patient services at state-run hospitals have been closed because of the lingering dispute that has been on-going for more than a week. The government nonetheless stated that it has put in place plans for urgent cases, including recruiting private doctors.

 For the purpose of alleviating the pressure, hospital managers, who are also doctors, have also been told to deal with emergencies.

Patients currently in hospitals are being treated by doctors but new ones are however being turned away.

Doctors have threatened to discharge all patients and resign en masse if the dispute is not resolved by 13 August.

 The battle between doctors and the communication team for the governing NDC party has been playing out on social media.

Amongst the insults have been salary comparisons - although the doctors are not demanding an increase in their monthly pay.

A senior doctor gets paid about $920 (£593) a month.

The striking doctors want free post-graduate medical education, better retirement packages and increases in clothing, fuel and maintenance allowances.

Other demands includea request for free overseas healthcare for services not available in Ghana and the right to import vehicles into the country free of duty.

The general secretary of the Ghana Medical Association, Dr Frank Serebour,  has said that supporters of the governing party's stance were being foolish.

Ghana's President John Mahama said on during that he would not be pressured to spend more than had been budgeted for the year.

All Ghanaians can have access free state healthcare if they register with The National Health Insurance Authority.

Government officials have advised people needing urgent medical attention during the strike to go to private clinics and show their health insurance cards.

It is however yet to be confirmed whether those who have done so have received free medical care

 

 

 

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