Health Ministry Begins Pilot Programme To Eradicate Bilharzia

Zebilla (U/E) The Ministry of Health in collaboration with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) in the Upper East has begun a three-year pilot programme to eradicate Bilharzia from the Bawku West district. The disease has become rampant in the area following the construction of a number of dams by IFAD to facilitate farming in the dry season. The programme is estimated to cost 88 million cedis. This includes cost of drugs, chemicals, and the training of community-based health educators. Addressing the district assembly at its second ordinary session at Zebilla, the Senior Medical Officer in charge of Public Health in the region, Dr Joseph Amankwaah, said a survey conducted in the district showed that 50 per cent of school children have bilharzia and most people living around the dams are infected. Dr Amankwaah said household registers would be opened and people between the ages of five and 26 years would be treated while community members would be taught to apply chemicals in the dams to kill the vector snails. Gri

You may like

Peter Turkson

Ghana’s Peter Turkson among key contenders as Vatican eyes next pope

Chop bar

Foreign aid fails Ghana’s chop bar workers, new findings reveal

Qatar opens Quran centre in Accra

Qatar-funded Al-Mustafa Mosque opens in Accra as new centre for worship and Quranic studies

Ghana military leaders in Zimbabwe

Ghana military delegation tours Zimbabwe’s model waste facility

Ghana's economy is recovering

Ghana’s inflation eases again as stronger cedi boosts economic recovery

Ekperikpe Ekpo

Nigeria’s Ekpo elected to lead West African gas pipeline committee, vows to prioritise Ghana’s supply needs

Public notice
WP Radio
WP Radio
OFFLINE LIVE