Ghana is more likely to face a big scarcity of some important medication by the tip of June.
This is in accordance with the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), which has indicated that some amenities are already counting on others for vital drugs.
This comes after the Global Fund issued a closing warning to Ghana demanding instant clearance of tuberculosis (TB) and malaria drugs that arrived within the nation final October.
According to the fund, regardless of assurances from the federal government, a portion of the shipments stay caught on the port and might expire.
In April, the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) introduced it had secured the tax waivers to allow it to clear the medication after months of delay.
However, demurrages and third-party costs are amounting to seven million cedis which should be paid.
Due to this debt, greater than 118 containers are caught on the port.
Samuel Hackman, from the Global Fund Coordinating Mechanism Secretariat, said that it not solely impacts the $45 million price of commodities but additionally strains Ghana’s relationship with the Global Fund.
GMA fears that the impact of this growth will start to chew quickly.
Speaking on Newsnite, GMA General Secretary, Dr Richard Selormey defined that “Some places are experiencing a shortage.”
“But because there’s a few of them within the system, which the health directorates are beginning to or should I say mop up a few of them in some of the regions where there are a few to send… but within the end of this month, many places are going to begin to experience the shortage of these medications.”
“So it’s going to become a nationwide problem by the end of the month. Of course, we need to get the containers out and we don’t have to wait for a shortage before we even think about that.”
President of the Ghana HIV and AIDS Network, Ernest Amoabeng Ortsin has additionally highlighted the urgency of this problem.
“It is true that we have run out of stock for TB medications. It is also true that the Global Fund has indicated that it is going to cut ties with us as a country. When it comes to treatment for these two diseases, HIV and TB for example, if you are on medication and you stop, your body develops a resistance. So later on, when you go back to the medication, it doesn’t work. It will mean that you need to be taken unto a second line of medications which are even more expensive.”
“These are medicines that the government of Ghana is not even procuring. They are being given to us for free and yet we simply cannot take them from our port. It is baffling,” he stated.