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11th June 2025 11:33:33 AM
4 mins readBy: Phoebe Martekie Doku
Engineer and policy analyst Michael Kosi Dedey has called the government's appeal to retired health professionals baseless.
Speaking to the media on Channel One TV on Wednesday, June 11, he noted that the government's clarion call indicates a sign of poor leadership.
“He waited for the people to go on strike and later came and told them retirees should volunteer. How is that possible? You think the retirees will come? Let us get real, it is not going to happen. Nobody will come anywhere.”
“When he came into office, this was an issue already on the table. He was going round fighting chief executives in this country of hospitals instead of sitting down and saying that these are issues that we need to look at, how do we go about it?” he added.
The Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives Association (GRNMA) General Secretary, David Tenkorang, has also shared similar sentiments.
He noted that the presence of the retirees won't resolve the impasse.
On Tuesday, June 10, the Minister of Health, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, made a clarion call to nurses and midwives on retirement to volunteer their services to mitigate the effects of the ongoing strike.
“Given the urgency of the situation and the suffering of patients, the government is appealing to public-spirited retired nurses and midwives to volunteer their service for a brief period pending the resolution of the impasse,” the minister stated.
Members of GRNMA on June 2 withdrew from their posts over delays in their 2024 Collective Agreement.
To ensure that the general public continues to access quality healthcare, the Health Ministry instructed all hospital managers, particularly Directors of Nursing Services and their Deputies, to be present at work at all times during the period of the industrial action.
The ambulance service is expected to remain on standby in every district to support emergencies promptly. Additionally, all health facilities are to establish coordinating structures that can effectively manage emergencies and maintain continuous communication with ambulance services to ensure a swift response when needed.
Furthermore, the Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, along with Chief Executive Officers and Medical Directors of Teaching Hospitals, is required to provide daily reports to the Acting Chief Director on the status of healthcare service delivery within their respective institutions.
To manage the anticipated surge in patient numbers due to ongoing industrial action, the Ministry of Health has pledged to collaborate with quasi-government health facilities. This partnership aims to ease the pressure on public health institutions and ensure continuous care delivery.
The ministry has also advised rotational nurses and those currently undergoing mandatory clinical training to refrain from participating in any form of industrial action. Their cooperation is crucial in maintaining essential services during this period.
Ongoing monitoring of the situation will be conducted by the ministry to ensure that all necessary logistics and resources are made available to mitigate the impact of the strike.
Despite these interventions, the GRNMA strike bites hard. In public health facilities, nurses have withdrawn their services, leaving many patients stranded.
In response to the strike action, the National Labour Commission (NLC) filed an ex parte application on Thursday, June 5.
A 10-day injunction has been placed on the nationwide strike after the Industrial and Labour Division of the High Court in Accra described the protest as illegal.
But the GRNMA has disclosed that it is yet to formally receive a court order restraining its ongoing strike.
Public Relations Officer of the GRNMA, Joseph Krampah, has insisted that the group will continue its strike until an official injunction notice is served.
According to him, although the association is a law-abiding group, it cannot obey unofficial reports.
“They think that they should serve us a letter; we can’t prevent them, but what constitutes an illegal strike? When in Ghana has the Labour Commission said that this strike is legal? It is only illegal when they don’t inform your office about the intended strike, and we did—you had the letter,” Krampah said.
He added: “If you are declaring it as illegal or whatever and you are bringing injunction, that is your job to do, and we respect the court and the NLC very much. We are law-abiding people. But just that things that we have not seen, we cannot act on them. I am saying that we haven’t received any letter. None of the executives have been served any letter about that. So till we know that, aluta continua.”
Presently, the Health Minister Mintah Akandoh has revealed that government will not be able to meet the conditions of service for the Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives Association (GRNMA), currently on strike, this year.
The sector minister announced that the conditions of service being requested to be implemented were not captured in the 2025 budget statement; hence, it will "completely throw the economy off gear if implemented in the manner it currently exists."
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