The Development Research and Advocacy Centre (DRAC) and the
Ghana Coalition of NGOs in Health (GCNH) have jointly launched a project to
combat skin Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) in the Upper East Region. The
two-year project, funded by ANESVAD Foundation and dubbed “Strengthening and
Building Capacity to Combat Skin NTDs in Ghana”, was launched on Friday in the
Bongo District.
“The choice of Bongo for the launch of this important project was no accident.
When we started the preparatory meeting for the launch of this project, we from
the civil society organisation (CSO) fraternity did not actually have a
particular place in mind for the launch.
“But as professionals will always have better eyes of spotting a challenge
sitting afar, the [Upper East] Regional Disease Control Officer said, Guys, if
this launch is to give us the desired impact, it is important to have it in a
district with a relatively endemic situation. So, why don’t you give me a
little time to figure out the place?’ So, we waited and, then, in a few days,
he got back with the suggestion we have the launch here in Bongo,” said DRAC’s
Director of Programmes, Milton Aberinga, in a speech delivered at the event.
While delivering his speech, Aberinga listed a number of neglected tropical
diseases he said had become endemic in Ghana. He cited lymphatic filariasis
(elephantiasis), onchocerciasis, trachoma, schistosomiasis, soil transmitted
helminthiasis, buruli ulcer and yaws. He also mentioned leprosy, guinea worm,
Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT), cutaneous leishmaniasis and rabies. But he
said the ones the Upper East Region was struggling with among the diseases were
leprosy, elephantiasis and yaws.
According to the Director of Programmes, efforts being made to control the
diseases are yielding no results owing to such factors as limited funding,
inadequate human resource capacity, stigma, knowledge gaps, cultural norms and
tradition among others.
“Stigma associated with certain disease conditions tend to affect how people
affected by such diseases are accepted and supported in rural communities
especially where cultural practices are ingrained as lifestyles. High levels of
stigma are associated with NTDs endemic in some districts in the Upper East
Region.
“This results in poor access to health services. However, the right to health
is a constitutional right and Ghana has ratified several global-level
instruments and accords promoting the value of health and the right to health
for all Ghanaians. It is, therefore, important that awareness of the right to
access health services be increased for beneficiaries to begin to demand more
from duty bearers for health,” he stated.
Project is to be implemented in five districts
DRAC and GCNH are set to carry out the project in five districts in the Upper
East Region. The areas include Binduri, Bongo, Builsa South, Nabdam and
Talensi.
An organisation has been engaged to implement the project in partnership with
DRAC and GCNH in each of the districts. They are the Women Integrated
Development and Education Centre (WIDEC) in Binduri, Integrated Youth Needs and
Welfare (INTYON) in Nabdam, Kunkua Renaissance Development Centre (KURADEC) in
Bongo, Rural Underprivileged Youth (RUPY) in Talensi and Akanyue Foundation in
Builsa South.
The key objectives of the project are: to help reduce deaths associated with
skin NTDs; to strengthen the healthcare system towards the integration of skin
NTDs with other programmes, particularly at the primary healthcare level; to
advocate for the inclusion of skin NTDs into the National Health Insurance
Scheme (NHIS) covering both registration and treatment costs; to improve the
knowledge level of healthcare staff on Intensified and Innovative Disease
Management (IIDM) and to improve the surveillance, reporting, and referrals of
skin NTDs patients
The project is also aimed at advocating for the inclusion of skin NTDs in the
NHIS and Disability funds, for the inclusion of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene
(WASH) in the mid-term plans and budgets of district assemblies’ community sensitisation
activities on WASH and for the inclusion of skin NTDs in local health
authorities' planning and budgeting.
DRAC and GCNH are also slated to organise training programmes for health staff
on skin NTDs as well as surveillance, referrals, reporting, and management.
Skin NTDs are neglected because they generally affect only poor people, expert
sharing the situation of skin NTDs in the region with participants, the Upper
East Regional Leprosy Coordinator, Eric Dakura, observed that the diseases were
neglected because those affected mostly were the ordinary members of society.
“Other reasons why these diseases are neglected include lack of political
voice, lack of visibility, low mortality and, low risk perception. These
diseases will never appear at the Presidency. They will never get close to the
Ministry of Food and Agriculture and the like.
“These diseases are prevalent because much attention has not been given to them
because it affects the poor. People who can hardly make ends meet, people who
are not decision-makers, they are the people these diseases affect. Those are
the reasons the diseases are neglected by policy makers, health authorities,
health professionals, general population as well as families and relations,” he
pointed out.
He said 31 new leprosy cases were detected in 2020, 33 new cases in 2021 and 34
in 2022 in the region. In 2022, Bongo District recorded 9 new leprosy cases.
That was the highest number of new leprosy cases detected that year in the
region. Builsa South District and Kassena-Nankana Municipality recorded 6 new
cases each. Builsa North Municipality and Kassena-Nankana West District
documented 3 new leprosy cases each.
The same year saw 2 cases recorded in Pusiga, Talensi and Tempane districts
apiece. One new case was recorded in Bolgatanga Municipality that year. The
other areas― Bawku Municipality, Bawku West District, Binduri District, Garu
District, Nabdam District and Bolgatanga East District― did not record any new
cases that year.
Although the trend of yaws cases in the region has shown an almost-consistent
decline since 2016 when 357 cases were reported, of concern to participants at
the event was the presence of the contagious disease across the region. In
2017, 117 yaws cases were recorded in the region while 180, 54, 55, 68, and 46
cases were reported in 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022 respectively.
A total of 2,373 elephantiasis cases were recorded in the region in 2022 while
1,315 cases of hydrocele (a type of swelling in the scrotum) were reported in
the same year in the region. Several challenges, according to the
regional leprosy coordinator, accounted for the presence and spread of skin
NTDs in the region. He listed late reporting of cases, inadequate knowledge
about skin NTDs, systemic poor prevention and management of disability,
dwindling resources for
prevention and management of the diseases and late detection among others.
Declaring the project launched, Esther Mbilla, a public health nurse who
represented the Bongo District Health Directorate at the event, said worm
infestation, too, had become endemic in Bongo in addition to leprosy, yaws, and
elephantiasis. She urged all stakeholders to help not only in curbing the
spread of the skin NTDs but also in eradicating them by intensifying surveillance
and taking advantage of early diagnosis and treatment programmes organised by
the Ghana Health Service (GHS) in the district.
The Chief of Anafobiisi-Bongo, Naba Anyanebah Akolgo Saabo II, chaired the
event, placing an emphasis on the need for the five districts, where the
project is scheduled to be undertaken on a pilot basis, to cooperate with its
executors.
“What is important now is for us to encourage them and not to discourage them,
or make them regret choosing to work in the districts. I would like to caution
participants that one of the reasons programmes may fail is time. Time, as we
all know, is the bedrock of the success of every programme.
“You cannot succeed if you work without timelines or planning. In planning, you
need to manage your time well to enable you to accomplish every important
activity. I would, therefore, wish to plead with participants that we begin to
see time management as key in all our endeavours,” he said.
