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Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital

Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital

FieldValue
nameKomfo Anokye Teaching Hospital
org_groupMinistry of Health
imageKomfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH).png
captionThe entrance of Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH)
logoKomfo Anokye Teaching Hospital logo.png
logo_size100px
locationKumasi
regionKumasi Metropolis
stateAshanti Region
countryGhana
coordinates
healthcareGhana Health Service / NHIS Accredited
typeTeaching
speciality
standards
emergencyYes
affiliationKwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology School of Medical Sciences
beds1000
founded1954
closed
website
other_links

The Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH), also known as GEE after the name of its contractors Messrs. GEE Walter & Slater in Kumasi, Ashanti Region, Ghana, is the second-largest hospital in Ghana, and the only tertiary health institution in the Ashanti Region.

History

Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital was the main referral hospital for the Ashanti, Brong Ahafo and northern regions of Ghana. Until then Tamale Regional Hospital was upgraded to Teaching hospital hence handling referrals from Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions thereby easing some pressure on it.

The hospital was built in 1954, as the Kumasi Central Hospital. It was later named Komfo Anokye Hospital after Okomfo Anokye, a legendary fetish priest of the Ashanti. It is said that Anokye placed an unmovable sword in the middle of the Ashanti empire. Many have tried and failed to remove the sword. In 1996, the Okomfo Anokye Sword Site was built around the sword on the grounds of the hospital.

The hospital was converted into a teaching hospital in 1975 affiliated to the medical school of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. The hospital is also accredited for postgraduate training by the West African College of Surgeons in surgery, obstetrics and gynaecology, otorhinolaryingology, ophthalmology and radiology. The hospital currently has about 1000 beds, up from the initial 500 when first built.

The latest building added to Komfo Anokye Hospital was the National Accident and Emergency Centre.

In October 2019, the first surgery on a heart at the hospital without making an incision was performed successfully.

In November 2019, the hospital received four awards at the 2019 Ghana Procurement and Supply Chain Awards. The awards were for Excellence in Procurement and Supply Chain (silver category), Public Procurement and Supply Chain Compliance (silver category), Procurement and Supply Chain Team of the year (Bronze category).

In March 2022, the hospital received a donation of 100 beds from Ghana Oil Company Limited (GOIL) to enhance the access of beds by patients.

Directorates

The hospital has clinical and non-clinical directorates.

[[Physician]]s at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH)}}
Exterior and Entrance of the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH)

The clinical directorates include:

  • Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
  • Child Health
  • Oral health
  • Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat (EENT)
  • Diagnostics
  • Medicine
  • Obstetrics & Gynaecology
  • Oncology
  • Family Medicine
  • Surgery
  • Accident and Emergency department
  • Pharmacy
  • Physiotherapy
  • Laboratory

The non-clinical directorates include:

  • Domestic Services
  • Security
  • Supply Chain Management
  • Technical Services

National Accident and Emergency Centre

The constructions of the National Accident and Emergency Centre started in 2004 and were completed in 2008. The whole project was carried out by Hospital Engineering GmbH and GerTech GmbH from Germany. The project was done as a Turn-Key Project, including planning, designing, project development, construction works and implementation as well as provision and installation of medical and technical equipment.

The following departments exist:[[File:Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Kumasi, Ghana.jpg|thumb|Building of KATH]]

  • Laundry
  • Central Stores
  • Mortuary
  • Medical Gas Bottles Store
  • Blood Bank
  • Blood Donor Services
  • Haematology
  • Microbiology
  • Biochemistry
  • Parasitology
  • Observation Wards
  • Resuscitation Area
  • Pharmacy
  • First Aid Bays
  • Radiology
  • ICU
  • Wards
  • CSSD
  • Operating Theatre Department
  • Burns Unit
  • Administration

A specific feature of the National Accident and Emergency Centre is an ultramodern facility for Forensic Medicine.

Missing baby scandal

On February 5, 2014 Suwaiba Abdul Mumin was admitted to the hospital for the birth of her baby. She was informed that the baby was stillborn and when she asked to see the body, she was told it could not be found. The bodies of four other children pronounced stillborn by the hospital that day were also missing. The suspicious "vanishing of babies" made headlines with some suggesting an ongoing illegal baby selling business by midwives and hospital authorities. Seven people were charged but given bail on February 27, 2014. Minister of Health Sherry Ayitey placed the doctor and midwife, as well as the chief executive officer of the hospital, on indefinite leave. She went ahead to propose a Ghc 50,000 compensation which was rejected by the Suweiba and her family who still maintain that the baby is alive.

References

References

  1. "Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital-About Us". Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital online.
  2. Govindaraj, Ramesh. (August 1996). "Hospital Autonomy (GEE) in Ghana: The Experience of Korle Bu and Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospitals". School of Public Health, University of Ghana and Harvard School of Public Health.
  3. (September 2020). "Measures of geographic accessibility to health care in the Ashanti Region of Ghana". Scientific African.
  4. "Komfo Ankye Teaching Hospital".
  5. (2012). "Buruli Ulcer: Treatment Challenges at Three Centres in Ghana". Journal of Tropical Medicine.
  6. (27 February 2013). "Tamale Teaching Hospital leads in endoscopy services". Ghana News Agency.
  7. "Doctors, nurses and babies suffocate from excessive heat at Tamale Teaching Hospital". MyJoyonline..
  8. "Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital".
  9. "Our History".
  10. "INORMUS".
  11. afrisearch. (2020-11-14). "Why The komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital is Called "Gee"".
  12. "Our History".
  13. "Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital-About Us". Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital online.
  14. "Visit Ghana - Komfo Anokye Sword Site".
  15. "The Sword That Can't Be Moved – Africa Dispatch".
  16. https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/The-story-of-Okomfo-Anokye-s-sword-The-sacred-sword-that-can-t-be-removed-827809
  17. "College of Health Sciences:Faculty of Medicine". Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology.
  18. https://ir.knust.edu.gh/server/api/core/bitstreams/99ac7ebe-017c-4d82-bff2-cee4a7f09b43/content
  19. "List of Accredited Institutions for Training". West African College of Surgeons.
  20. "KATH Makes History As Ghanaian Doctors Perform Heart Surgery Without A Cut".
  21. (2015-11-21). "KATH completes first successful open-heart surgery - MyJoyOnline".
  22. (2019-11-06). "KATH wins four procurement awards".
  23. (7 March 2022). "GOIL donates 100 beds to KATH".
  24. GNA. (2022-03-05). "GOIL donates 100 hospital beds to KATH".
  25. (2022-03-06). "GOIL donates 100 beds to Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital - MyJoyOnline".
  26. "GOIL HANDS OVER ONE THOUSAND BEDS TO MINISTRY OF HEALTH".
  27. (2021-05-18). "KATH laboratory workers still agitated over refusal to reassign 2 medical specialists".
  28. Yushaw, Ismail. (19 February 2014). "The Truth concerning the stolen Baby at KATH".
  29. (28 February 2014). "Ghana hospital given 14 days to find 'missing babies'". BBC News.
  30. "Gma Must Stop The Blackmail - Felix Kwakye Ofosu". wn.com.
  31. (March 26, 2014). "KATH CEO asked to proceed on leave". Tv3 News.
  32. Efua Idan Osam. (May 8, 2014). "Kath Missing baby: Suweiba rejects GHC 50,000 compensation". Citifmonline.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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