Source adomonline
Health News Ghana
Ghana Health Services deploys 20,000 doses of Mpox vaccines to the Western Region.
The Western Regional Directorate of the Ghana Health Service (GHS) has taken delivery of 20,000 doses of Mpox vaccines for a 21-day vaccination exercise to help save lives and break the transmission cycle.
The Regional Public Health Director, Dr. Gifty Amugi, said the 21-day vaccination exercise would have a four-day aggressive penetration in most affected communities, while the remaining 17 days would be normal delivery.
She described the vaccines as safe and approved by the Food and Drug Authority (FDA).
The region currently has 59 active cases from 13 districts with two deaths.
Dr. Amugi said this at the Sub-national launch of the Mpox Vaccine in New Takoradi in the Western Region, with departmental heads as well as District Health Directors of the service well represented.
The Acting Director-General of GHS, Dr. Samuel Kaba Akoriyea, who launched the sub-national project, said, “Some 1,800 clinicians and health staff have been trained in the surveillance…”We shall keep the campaign and awareness across the country.”
He thanked dedicated workers and volunteers for the commitment to the response activities.
Dr. Akoriyea said the nation has so far recorded three deaths. “Our newest hope is the vaccination; we cannot afford to lose people to this preventable condition.”
All health workers, close contacts of confirmed cases, and the seven high-risk districts, among others, would be vaccinated first.
Dr. Akoriyea encouraged proper hand washing and avoiding close contact with or handling the clothing of affected persons.
He urged all stakeholders to come on board: traditional leaders, the Red Cross, and opinion leaders, adding, “We all need to be part of the solution.”
Dr. Marion Okoe, the GHS Western Regional Director, said the vaccination, which was targeted, would complement ongoing surveillance, case management, home care, and other interventions to arrest the virus.
Dr. Frank Lule, from the WHO country office, said the African region had so far recorded 120 deaths from 30,000 confirmed cases.
He noted that the WHO would continue to provide technical and operational support to end the condition in Ghana.
The team, after the launch, embarked on community engagement and vaccination.


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