A three-day workshop to assess the contribution of the private sector in health care delivery in Ghana began in Accra on Monday.
The workshop, a follow-up to a similar one organized in July this year, would discuss findings and identify information gaps in the on-going assessment of the sector to help in mapping out a strategy to improve the involvement of the private sector in health.
It would also identify factors that created and sustained the role of the private sector in health care delivery, provide information for decision making and facilitate productive engagement between the public and private sector.
Health Minister Dr Benjamin Kunbuor addressing the opening session, commended the Results for Development (R4D), private consultants who undertook the World Bank sponsored assessment project.
He said there was the need to understand how effectively the private sector could complement government's efforts to meet the strategic objectives of the health sector.
Dr Kunbuor noted that the health sector in Ghana had undergone tremendous changes over the last two decades, with radical reforms within the public health sector in the manner health services were planned, funded and implemented.
He said the adoption of a sector-wide approach to health development, marked a distinct departure from project aid, and paved the way for a different approach to partnerships in health care delivery.
Dr Kunbuor explained that collaboration with the private sector and support of private initiatives in health was a key strategy to improve access to services, especially those services that were beyond primary health care.
According to him, the private sector involvement in improving quality and standards of training and human resource development as well as the provision of a critical mass of tertiary services in the last decade had contributed immensely to improvement in health services in Ghana.
"Government would remain committed to ensuring that policies and programmes that would support private health sector involvement in health care delivery are supported, "he said.
Dr Kunbuor pointed out that recommendations from the workshop was critical in providing the required information for the way forward to enhance the provision of health care delivery in the country, and encouraged participants to be critical about the challenges facing the private sector and make appropriate recommendations that would lead to actions and achievable results within the next four years.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Ebo Whyte returns with ‘The 4Play’
10 mins -
2024/25 Ghana League: Heart of Lions sink Legon Cities to go third
49 mins -
Bright Simons: DBG, Ghana’s top development bank, goes for the jugular
1 hour -
Governance and Entrepreneurship consultant demands global support for Africa’s young farmers
1 hour -
Ghanaians reminded to prioritise regular health check-ups
1 hour -
Salah brace sends Liverpool 8 points clear
2 hours -
Leicester City sack manager Steve Cooper
2 hours -
Akwasi Sarpong wins AIBs 2024 Award for BBC OS coverage of Israeli hostage release
2 hours -
Gospel musician Adeline Baidoo shares inspiring story of triumph over adversity
2 hours -
Kwesi Yankah: Escape from Ghana
2 hours -
Musician DeThompson DDT drops new single Happiness
2 hours -
Ukraine’s Grain Initiative raises over $200m, provides lifeline amid global food crisis
3 hours -
Dancehall queen Spice donates to students of 3 basic schools in Accra through MYO Global Foundation
4 hours -
Kamal-Deen Abdulai urges Nanton to help NPP break the 8
4 hours -
TVET is not a dumping ground for underperforming students – C/R Minister
4 hours