The Auditor-General, Johnson Akuamoah Asiedu, has cited the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital and the LEKMA Hospital, both in Accra, for charging fees not approved by Parliament.
Mr Asiedu said in the 2021 Auditor-General Report that the actions of the two hospitals in the national capital were in contradiction with Regulation 48 of the Public Financial Management Regulations, 2019 (L.I. 2378).
The regulation provides that a Principal Spending Officer responsible for collecting various types of fees and charges shall review annually the administrative efficiency of collection, the accuracy of past estimates and the relevance of rates, fees and charges to current economic conditions and submit a proposal through the minister to Parliament for approval.
Breakdown
In spite of this, the 2021 Auditor-General Report on the audit of ministries, departments and other agencies (MDAs) of central government and the courts for the year ended December 31, 2021, said the two hospitals charged patients maintenance and intramural fees and other service fees that were not part of the list of fees approved for them.
The report said the fees amounted to GH¢35.44 million and were taken between January 2019 and December 2020 “without the approval of Parliament.”
It explained that while Korle-Bu charged GH¢35.34 million as maintenance and intramural fees within the period, LEKMA took GH¢100,000 from the patients as an increase in fees for 32 services rendered without recourse to the law.
Recommendation
The report recommended that the heads of the two hospitals should seek retrospective approval from Parliament for the collection of the fees.
Should they fail to do that, it said, “they should desist from such practices.”
Misapplication
“We noted that between January 2020 to December 2020, the management of the Korle-Bu Hospital disbursed a total amount of GH¢10,165,386.19 from fees collected for the maintenance of the hospital and equipment on employee allowances without approval from the Ministry of Health,” it said.
It said the action was in spite of Section 96 of the Public Financial Management Act, 2016 (Act 921), which provided that a person who was responsible for any improper payment of public funds or the payment of money that was not duly verified in line with existing procedures committed an offence and was liable on summary conviction to a term of imprisonment or a fine.
Consequently, it is recommended that the heads of the hospitals should ensure the refund of the amount into the maintenance fees account of the hospital to be used for its intended purposes.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana and Seychelles strengthen bilateral ties with focus on key sectors
16 mins -
National Elections Security Taskforce meets political party heads ahead of December elections
20 mins -
Samsung’s AI-powered innovations honored by Consumer Technology Association
39 mins -
Fugitive Zambian MP arrested in Zimbabwe – minister
57 mins -
Town council in Canada at standstill over refusal to take King’s oath
1 hour -
Trump picks Pam Bondi as attorney general after Matt Gaetz withdraws
1 hour -
Providing quality seeds to farmers is first step towards achieving food security in Ghana
2 hours -
Thousands of PayPal customers report brief outage
2 hours -
Gary Gensler to leave role as SEC chairman
2 hours -
Contraceptive pills recalled in South Africa after mix-up
2 hours -
Patient sues Algerian author over claims he used her in novel
2 hours -
Kenya’s president cancels major deals with Adani Group
2 hours -
COP29: Africa urged to invest in youth to lead fight against climate change
3 hours -
How Kenya’s evangelical president has fallen out with churches
3 hours -
‘Restoring forests or ravaging Ghana’s green heritage?’ – Coalition questions Akufo-Addo’s COP 29 claims
3 hours