Tag Archives: Children

NIA to register children from age six to 14 from June 10 – Prof. Ken Attafuah

The National Identification Authority (NIA), will begin the registration of children between the ages of 6 to 14 next month. The exercise, according to the Executive Secretary of the Prof. Kenneth Agyeman Attafuah, who disclosed this says the registration shall take place at all of its 170 districts across the country.

“This is not a mass registration, unlike what we did some years ago. This is not the time for the replacement of cards for people to drop in for that. No, we are not going to offer any other registration service at the schools. Even if you are a teacher in the school where the exercise is going on, you will not be allowed to register during this exercise,” he added.

Prof. Kenneth Agyeman Attafuah, who was speaking at a media engagement in Kumasi on Saturday, May 18, 2024, noted that that the NIA will collaborate with the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) and schools across the country for an effective outcome. The process he added comes at no cost.

“Parents will have to go to registration centers at their children’s schools with their birth certificates or passports, and the exercise is free,” he added.
However, if a child does not have any of the two mentioned requirements, he stressed that parents or guardians will have to come to the school and help the NIA register the child into the system as a guarantor.

Prof. Attafuah noted that, as part of the exercise, the NIA will offer the necessary training for teachers in the various schools, adding that the exercise will not disrupt learning activities during school hours.

Prof. Dr Grace Ayensu-Danquah, the high-achiever fighting for the welfare of women and children

For a country saddled with limited opportunities and the resulting brain drain, not many of the citizens are blessed to migrate to and develop an illustrious career in the United States of America (USA). The few Ghanaians who are, hardly look back home, given the myriad of challenges that await any ‘returnee.’ Prof. Dr Grace Ayensu-Danquah is one of the rare exceptions.

A renowned surgeon and academician, Prof. Dr Ayensu-Danquah returned home around 2013 to help impact the lives of her fellow citizens and advance the welfare of women and children in particular, in furtherance of her belief that passion matters more than profit.

The Johns Hopkins University-trained has since channeled her energy and resources into medical philanthropy, by tapping her knowledge and professional expertise to provide free medical care to help improve the lives of women and children in Ghana and Africa as a whole.

It is her conviction that an empowered woman, no matter her educational background and social status, is the fulcrum around which her community will be transformed. In that regard, Prof. Dr Ayensu-Danquah has provided free medical screening to women, children, and the underprivileged in her constituency, the Essikado-Ketan, in the Western Region, and the whole of Ghana. She has also contributed immensely to policy dialogue and formulation in advancement of improved medical care for women and children. In her entire personal, professional, academic, and political life, Prof. Dr Ayensu-Danquah has fought for the rights of women and the girl-child; often holding high the capabilities of the Ghanaian female to rise up to the occasion when given equal opportunities and contribute meaningfully to development. The University of Wisconsin-trained medical practitioner is an unrelenting gender advocate who works with all, using her bottom-up approach, to ensure that women occupy their rightful place in society.

At a personal level, those who know and associate with her describe Prof. Dr Ayensu-Danquah as a virtuous and humble lady who treats everybody she comes into contact with, especially her fellow women, with utmost respect and decorum. Indeed, her main aim in seeking political office on the ticket of the National Democratic Congress is to help create equal opportunities for women to help improve their lives.

With evidence of her love and support for women, children, and the underprivileged there for everyone to see, it now behooves the people of the Essikado-Ketan Constituency in the Western Region to elect her into power to help empower her to do more good for many more people.

Brief Profile

In addition to being a gender advocate and philanthropist, Prof. Dr Ayensu-Danquah (MD, MPH, FGCPS, FICS, FACS) is a humanitarian surgeon and educationist

She holds a Bachelor of Science (BSc.) Degree in Biology from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and a Medical Degree from the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

She is a double board-certified surgeon trained in general surgery, having completed a trauma and burns fellowship. She is also trained in reconstructive surgery.

Additionally, she holds a Master’s degree in Public Health in International Health Management and Planning with special certification in humanitarian assistance and disaster management from the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health

Dr Ayensu-Danquah has also worked in private practice in the USA and holds licenses to practice in California, Michigan, and Maryland.

In Ghana, she runs a private surgical facility in Accra. She is also the founder of Healing Hands Organisation, a non-governmental organization (NGO) dedicated to providing medical and surgical care to the poor and needy with no access to proper healthcare. The NGO also provides free medical supplies and equipment to clinics and hospitals in rural areas.

Dr Ayensu-Danquah is a member of the Ghana Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) Technical Advisory Committee on Safety of Vaccines And Biological Products (TAC-VBP) and a board member of Days for Girls International Ghana.

She is also an Adjunct Professor of Surgery at the Center for Global Surgery at the University of Utah in the United States, a lecturer at the University of Cape Coast School of Medical Sciences in Ghana, a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and a fellow of the Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons.

15 children die at Tamale Teaching Hospital over lack of dialysis machines

The shortage of pediatric dialysis machines and consumables has tragically led to the loss of 15 children at the Tamale Teaching Hospital.

The lack of these essential medical supplies has forced healthcare workers to improvise with adult machines, putting the lives of vulnerable patients at extreme risk.

Adam Yahaya Wanzam, the Nurse Manager of the Tamale Teaching Hospital Dialysis Unit, in an interview with Citi News, issued a desperate plea for assistance, urging the government, individuals, and non-governmental organizations to step forward and provide the life-saving equipment and supplies that are urgently needed.

“We have lost over 10 to 15 children who were supposed to receive dialysis,” Wanzam lamented. “But for a lack of pediatric machines, we were improvising with the adult machines, and the adult machines and consumables are not for children.”

Wanzam added that the consequences of this shortage are devastating, not only for the children who have lost their lives but also for their families who must endure the unimaginable pain.

“We are calling on individuals and Non-governmental organisations to come to our aid by helping us acquire these pediatric machines and consumables so that when an innocent child finds him/herself in this situation, the Tamale Teaching Hospital Dialysis unit can be able to rescue them.”

 

Source: Citinewsroom.com