Audio By Carbonatix
The Health Officer with the UNICEF, Accra Office, Josephine Agborson, says malnutrition and anemia, especially among children under-five remained a concern to the United Nations body.
She said challenges, such as stunting and wasting rates must be addressed and proven interventions promoting optimal infant and young child feeding practiced.
The health Officer said UNICEF remained a steadfast partner in a journey towards improved maternal, newborn, and adolescent health and nutrition (MNCAH & N) outcomes.
Madam Agborson said this in a solidarity message at the Volta Regional 2023 Annual Performance Review conference under the theme, “Strengthening the Primary Healthcare System for Improved Access to Quality Health Service Delivery: The Role of Networks of Practice (NoPs),” in Ho.

On MNCAH&N indicators, she said available data showed that the country had made strides in reducing, but a lot more needed to be done to reduce disparities across the regions to further reduce maternal mortality; to ensure that skilled attendance at birth and access to essential newborn care services.
Madam Agborson said there was also the need to strengthen routine immunisation programmes, particularly in underserved communities-both rural and urban, and hard-to-reach, to achieve and sustain high coverage rates.
"With regard to adolescent health outcomes which includes teenage pregnancy rates, access to sexual and reproductive health services required continued focus," she added.
She said UNICEF was committed in supporting the Ghana Health Service to provide technical assistance to translate data findings into advocacy messages that drive policy change and resource allocation.
Madam Agborson said they would continue to offer expertise in areas like immunisation, maternal health, newborn care, adolescent health, and nutrition to strengthen service delivery at all levels.
She said they would also continue to contribute to capacity-building programmes for healthcare workers to ensure they possessed the necessary skills to deliver high-quality MNCAH&N services.
“By leveraging data, fostering collaboration, and harnessing UNICEF's support, the Volta Regional Health Directorate can make significant strides, ensuring a healthier and brighter future for the people especially women, newborns, children, and adolescents in the Region, she added.
There were solidarity messages from development partners including the Korea Foundation for International Health (KOFIH) USAID Q4H, WHO, and NGOs in Health.
Latest Stories
-
New Year’s Luv FM Family Party in the park ends in grand style at Rattray park
43 seconds -
Mahama targets digital schools, universal healthcare, and food self-sufficiency in 2026
8 minutes -
Ghana’s global image boosted by our world-acclaimed reset agenda – Mahama
29 minutes -
Full text: Mahama’s New Year message to the nation
29 minutes -
The foundation is laid; now we accelerate and expand in 2026 – Mahama
49 minutes -
There is no NPP, CPP nor NDC Ghana, only one Ghana – Mahama
51 minutes -
Eduwatch praises education financing gains but warns delays, teacher gaps could derail reforms
1 hour -
Kusaal Wikimedians take local language online in 14-day digital campaign
2 hours -
Stop interfering in each other’s roles – Bole-Bamboi MP appeals to traditional rulers for peace
2 hours -
Playback: President Mahama addressed the nation in New Year message
3 hours -
Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union call for strong work ethics, economic participation in 2026 new year message
4 hours -
Crossover Joy: Churches in Ghana welcome 2026 with fire and faith
5 hours -
Traffic chaos on Accra–Kumasi Highway leaves hundreds stranded as diversions gridlock
5 hours -
Luv FM Family Party in the Park: Hundreds of families flock to Luv FM family party as more join the queue in excitement
5 hours -
Failure to resolve galamsey menace could send gov’t to opposition – Dr Asah-Asante warns
5 hours
