
16 minute read
West African Health Organization (WAHO)
SPOTLIGHT ON HEALTHCARE IN WEST AFRICA
Exploring a borderless future for the health sector in West Africa in the wake of COVID-19
Writer: Phoebe Harper | Project Manager: Krisha Canlas
The healthcare sector across Africa is fraught with challenges. Faced with limited infrastructure, critical care capacity, and extreme labour shortages worsened by talent migration, the conditions facing the continent’s most fragile health systems have been exacerbated by the onslaught of the COVID-19 pandemic. Indeed, the level of skilled health workers across the continent as a whole has now fallen 60 percent below the United Nation’s minimum threshold. According to a McKinsey report, sub-Saharan Africa has only one to five percent of the ICU beds per capita, compared to European and East Asian countries, while the population bears nearly twice the disease burden per capita, measured by disability-adjusted life
years (DALYs), compared to the rest of the world.
In the realm of West Africa, the formation of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), seeks to consolidate the region to further strengthen its key sectors. Unsurprisingly, healthcare is a key staple of this. Founded in 1975, the fifteen regional members of ECOWAS comprise Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Cote d’ Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Senegal, and Togo.
Fostering the idea of self-sufficiency amongst its Member States, ECOWAS’ efforts in healthcare are embodied by the West Africa Healthcare Association (WAHO), which as a specialised agency enjoys administrative and financial autonomy.
INTRODUCTION

UG MC

UNIVERSITY OF GHANA MEDICAL CENTRE LTD
World Class Patient Care, Training and Research
Dr Darius Osei
CEO of the University of Ghana Medical Centre LTD
The 1,000-bed University of Ghana Medical Centre LTD (UGMC) is an ultramodern medical centre offering worldclass health services in Ghana, West Africa and beyond.
It is located at the University of Ghana, the country’s premier university located in Legon, Accra. The UGMC seeks to embody the spirit of hospitality which Ghana is globally acclaimed for and is focused on delivering an unparalleled patient experience through the deployment of a client-centric approach throughout every facet of its operations.
The UGMC currently has 809 staff including 147 doctors, 480 nurses and many other supporting staff, and it focuses around three core areas:
Clinical Care Section Services rendered at the UGMC’s clinical services section include Cardiac Catheterisation Lab services, Neurosurgery, Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery, Cardiology, Sex Dysfunction Clinic, Sleep Medicine, Artificial Reproductive Technologies (IVF), Bioethics and Palliative Care, Plastic / Cosmetic Surgery, Fluoroscopy, CT scans, MRI, Mammogram and a host of other medical imaging services. Medical Training and Simulation Centre (MTSC) The Medical Training and Simulation Centre (MTSC) of the UGMC is a nationally recognised multi-disciplinary academic centre committed to achieving excellence in medical education through the use of high-quality and cutting-edge computer-based simulations.
The MTSC is open to the training of three categories of people namely, pre-service health professionals who are students who desire to learn various skills in a realistic but risk-free environment before encountering real patients; practising health professionals to enable them to upgrade their skills in the diagnosis and management of various disease conditions and the public.
Medical and Scientific Research Centre (MSRC). The UGMC Medical and Scientific Research Centre (MSRC) aims to facilitate cutting edge translational research that will discover new treatments, methods and procedures to improve the health status of Ghanaians, Africans and the world. The Centre serves as a central hub for local and internationally funded research projects. Africa Outlook (AO): What is your take on the healthcare sector across Ghana at the moment? Do you find it a particularly exciting or challenging environment to be working in? Dr Darius Osei, CEO (DO): I would like to say that Ghana, with a current population of about 30 million people, has in recent times established a relatively successful national medical insurance system, and the quality of medical practice in the country - where it is available - is relatively high compared to other countries in the sub-region.
The country also has well-established and sophisticated administrative structures for the supervision of medical education and accreditation. However, some challenges faced include insufficient financial health investments when it comes to practical training opportunities to empower our health workers to deliver a number of pertinent and complex services. The establishment of the UGMC, which has the vision of providing quaternary services, is a welcome development.
Other challenges in Ghana’s healthcare sector include a relatively low percentage of highly specialised and skilled cadre of

www.ugmedicalcentre.org

health workers in the country, a disparity in healthcare services rendered to the rich and poor, and the pervasiveness of cultural and religious beliefs which often results in undue delay for patients who are in need of urgent care.
AO: Are there any major ongoing or recent projects that you would like to pay special mention to?
DO: The full operationalisation of the UGMC in March 2022 is worthy of mention here. Our Cardiothoracic Centre, the second largest in Ghana, just finished conducting a number of open-heart surgeries successfully. Moreover, our 16-bed general ICU is the largest in the country. This is in addition to a six-bed paediatric ICU, a 10-bed neonatal ICU, a four-bed cardiothoracic ICU and a sevenbed neurosurgery ICU, as well as 12 theatres and state-of-the-art IVF Centre.
AO: How has UGMC navigated the COVID-19 pandemic?
DO: 2020 was a really challenging year for all of us as was the case globally. However, for us at the UGMC, it was particularly challenging because, although the project was yet to be completed, the UGMC was designated as one of the National COVID-19 Treatment Centres by the Ministry of Health in April 2020. Nevertheless, during that year, the UGMC successfully managed more than 700 individuals diagnosed with COVID-19 including patients who required intensive care services. We also managed over 4,000 subscribers of the COVIDConnect online service which was a collaborative project between UGMC and PharmAccess, an international non-profit organisation (NGO) with a digital agenda dedicated to connecting more people in sub-Saharan Africa to better healthcare.
AO: Looking ahead, what are your key priorities for the coming year? Are you aiming to hit any specific targets, reach any goals, expand or diversify at all?
DO: We intend to make the UGMC one of the best destinations for medical tourism in the sub-region by distinguishing ourselves in the provision of worldclass healthcare, training and research in Africa. We are actively pursuing this agenda and currently recruiting specialists from all over Africa and the rest of the world to realise this vision.

UG MC
UNIVERSITY OF GHANA MEDICAL CENTRE LTD
World Class Patient Care, Training and Research
ADDRESS: P.O.BOX LG 25, Legon, Accra, West Africa GHANA POST GPS: GA-337-6980 CONTACT: 233- (302)-550843, 233-(302)-550844, 233-(302)-550845 WEBSITE: www.ugmedicalcentre.org
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University of Ghana Medical Centre ugmedicalcentre
UGMC
• CLINICAL SERVICES • MEDICAL TRAINING AND SIMULATION CENTRE • MEDICAL AND SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH CENTRE
Director General at WAHO, Stanley Okolo, shines a light on regional health integration and the current state of healthcare in West Africa
Stanley Okolo
Director General, WAHO
Since 1987, WAHO has operated as the proactive, consolidated body dedicated to improving the state of healthcare across West Africa through regional integration. Acting as the bridge between both Member States and the regional community, WAHO continues to advance a high-impact and cost-effective healthcare agenda for the region. We find out more with Director General, Stanley Okolo.
Africa Outlook (AO): Can you talk us through the origins of WAHO, how it came about, and its initial vision?
Stanley Okolo, Director General (SO): WAHO was created by a protocol A/P2/7/87 adopted by the Heads of State of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on 9 July 1987. This protocol originated from a November 1984 decision of the ECOWAS Council of Ministers that approved the merging of the West African Health Community (WAHC) based in Lagos and covering the five English speaking countries and the “Organisation de la Cooperation et de la Coordination pour la lute contre les Grandes Endémies” (OCCGE) based in Bobo-Dioulasso and involving French-speaking countries. WAHO was established with the mission of “the attainment of the highest possible standard and protection of health of the peoples in the subregion through the harmonisation of the policies of the Member States, pooling of resources, and co-operation with one another and with others for a collective and strategic combat against the health problems of the sub region.” Its initial vision is “to be a pro-active tool to facilitate regional health integration.”
AO: Since inception, how has WAHO developed and progressed in terms of its key objectives and the messages it tries to get across?
SO: From the creation protocol, the main objectives of WAHO are as follows: • Promote research into the major endemic diseases in the region and undertake activities aimed at controlling these diseases and their eradication. • Promote the training of medical specialists and of paramedical personnel, and where necessary, support the training of future medical graduates. • Collect and disseminate technical information, epidemiological and others related to health research and training in Member States. • Assist in the establishment of technical information centres in Member States. • Promote and harmonise the establishment of laboratories for the production of vaccines, medicines manufacturing and quality control in the region.
• Encourage cooperation in the control and eradication of drug dependency and abuse in the region. • Promote exchange of personnel and health technologies among Member States. • Provide advice on all health-related aspects of development projects to Member States. • Support the strengthening of health services and infrastructures of Member States. • Provide assistance to Member States to resolve health problems in the event of emergencies following natural disasters. • Collaborate with sub-regional, regional and international organisations to address health problems in the region. • Promote cooperation between scientists and professional groups contributing to health development. • Propose conventions, agreements, regulations, and recommendations on regional health issues and undertake tasks entrusted to the organisation in this regard.

Therefore, since its inception WAHO has developed several strategic plans in collaboration with stakeholders in order to implement its stated objectives.
At this juncture, WAHO has had strategic plans for the following periods: 2003-2007 for the first strategic plan, 2009-2013 for the second, and 2016-2020 which the third strategic plan covered. Currently, WAHO’s Vision 2030 Strategic Plan, its fourth, was recently adopted by the ECOWAS Ministers of Health, and the plan for its implementation through the years is in progress.


Stanley Okolo (left) with the current ECOWAS Chair of Authority, H.E. Nana Akufo-Addo, President of Ghana Stanley Okolo (left) with the president of Niger following 2020-2021 elections, H.E. Mohamed BAZOUM



Stanley Okolo (left) with HE President George Weah at the Commission of the Bo-Waterside Facility
AO: What do you find most exciting about working in West Africa’s healthcare sector?
SO: The most exciting considerations about working in West Africa’s healthcare sector is WAHO’s political mandate that allows it to work with the Heads of State and Governments, the ECOWAS Health Ministers, partners, and the regional community in a variety of health areas. For instance, the project Sahel Women’s Empowerment and Demographic Dividend (SWEDD) project, is a World Bank funded project, that targets amongst many of its objectives, reduction of total fertility rates (TFR), in the West African region, and reduction of maternal and child mortality rates. What is exciting is that, although fragmented in theoretical concepts in terms of funding, implementation, and end beneficiaries, the objective is achieved through the synergistic efforts of all involved. Many of WAHO’s projects are indicative of this kind of synergy. As a result, (i) partners and countries have confidence in WAHO; (ii) partners and countries continue to contribute to WAHO’s activities; (iii) there are measurable changes in the different health systems and an improvement to regional collaboration; and (iv) Member States are more inclined to adhere to the resolutions and guidelines proposed by WAHO at the ECOWAS Assembly of Health Ministers.
Stanley Okolo (left) with the President of the Gambia, His Excellency, Adama BARROW
AO: On the flip side, what are its biggest challenges?
SO: WAHO’s biggest challenge includes the chronic issue with human resource capacity both internally and at national level, that prevents WAHO from attaining its maximum potential. Other notable challenges include balancing the interests of external funders and the objectives of regional health interventions most beneficial to the ECOWAS population, increasing WAHO’s visibility throughout the region and the global stage particularly when








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Stanley Okolo (right) at the National School of Health Science in Mauritania with Resident Doctors

communicating WAHO’s interventions to ECOWAS Member States. Although progress has indeed been made in the region when considering some of the health indices that were previously reported in areas such as maternal and child mortality, and prevalence of non-communicable diseases, the current regional health indicators remain a challenge due to a myriad of factors.
AO: How has WAHO navigated the COVID-19 pandemic?
SO: On February 14, 2020, before the first COVID19 case was even reported in the region, WAHO convened an emergency meeting of the ECOWAS Ministers of Health to agree on a regional approach on coordination, collaboration, and communication to mitigate the impact of the pandemic in our region. WAHO and the Health Ministers agreed on the use of rapid response teams deployed from WAHO, create a regional commodity stock as there were serious shortages at the time, raise funds for the region and maintain regular communications.
The fundraising efforts were successful by all accounts, as WAHO was able to raise significantly more than the target of USD 51 million for procurement of medical goods such as PPEs, mechanical ventilators, diagnostic test kits, etc. In addition, the funds went towards distribution of the goods to all Member States, and training for frontline healthcare providers and laboratory technicians. The procurement and delivery of the critical medical products was facilitated through the support of the federal government of Nigeria through its provision of a storage warehouse for storing the procured


WAHO staff at Atlantic LifeSciences in Ghana to boost the initiative of local drug and vaccine manufacturing in West Africa
goods and equipment and a military aircraft used to distribute the goods to 13 of our 15 member states. The two exceptions were of course Nigeria and Ghana. In this case, Ghana sent its military plane to Nigeria to accept the goods.
In response to the border closures, WAHO worked with the ECOWAS Ministers of Health and Transportation to develop a harmonised protocol to provide guidelines such as non-pharmaceutical measures for land and air travels, testing and entry protocols, costs of PCRs and digitisation of test results for regional travel to minimise fraudulent results through recognised laboratories.
The process of digitising the tests was developed in collaboration with PanaBios, and the plan is to maximise its use throughout the 15 member states. Another notable contribution from WAHO to the regional response efforts to COVID-19 was the support given to Institut Pasteur in Dakar, (IPD), in the form of seed funding to produce rapid diagnostic test kits.
Note that there was support and collaboration from partners such as the Africa CDC ensuring that our response efforts were optimal for the West African ECOWAS population. “THE OBJECTIVE IS FOR WAHO TO BE KNOWN THROUGHOUT THE REGION AS THE PUBLIC HEALTH POWERHOUSE THE FOUNDERS INTENDED IT TO BE”
– STANLEY OKOLO, DIRECTOR GENERAL, WAHO
AO: What trends are currently transforming the sector? How are you responding to them?
SO: The health sector is truly unique, and its evolution is a constant. The current pandemic brought into even greater focus what is required to transform the health sector, particularly in our region. The shortage of critical materials, medical equipment, and later COVID-19 vaccinations at the height of the pandemic accelerated the need for local production of pharmaceutical and nonpharmaceutical goods. WAHO has been a dedicated force in pushing this agenda. Not only has WAHO

COVID 19 Medical Equipment donation by EU partners


Stanley Okolo (right) with the Regional Director of UNFPA at the National Laboratory in Chad

guided our external funding partners in recognising the readiness of Member States to boost local production, WAHO has also been working with several of our laboratories in the region that are progressively advancing this initiative. For instance, the Institut Pasteur Dakar (IPD), plans to commence production of COVID-19 vaccines in the coming months. The pandemic also exacerbated chronic issues such as reduced access to healthcare. Thus, another trend is the advocacy for Universal Health Coverage within the region. WAHO’s response to this trend has been just as dedicated. Not only did WAHO convene the very first UHC Summit with the ECOWAS Ministers of Health and other key members of the government sector, which led to the Accra Declaration where countries pledged to work collaboratively to develop meaningful strategies and legislative interventions to promote UHC.
AO: Has WAHO got any projects in the pipeline you wish to highlight?
SO: Acceleration of local production of vaccines and medications to reduce the dependency on foreign imports. The successful launching of the West African Medicines Regulation and Harmonisation programme ensures that the incentive to locally produce is at the fore moving forward. In addition, this initiative leads to a heightened level of pharmaco-vigilance in the regions that ensures only high-quality and safe drugs are circulated within the pharmaceutical markets in the ECOWAS region.
Donation of face masks by Trangreen Nigerian Limied To ECOWAS/WAHO
AO: How do you see the organisation developing over the next five years?
SO: WAHO’s plan over the next five years is to continue to build its institutional capacity by ensuring heightened visibility, high-quality outcomes of projects and programmes, and the full operationalisation of the Regional Centre for Surveillance and Disease Control, currently functioning at half-capacity. The objective is for WAHO to be known throughout the region as the public health powerhouse the founders intended it to be.
wahooas@wahooas.org www.wahooas.org