The YEA announced that five thousand senior high school graduates will at the end of this month be employed to assist with basic health care delivery such as recording medical history of patients at CHPS compounds located in rural communities.
The Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives Association described the move as disturbing and opposed the idea, as it maintains that only skilled professionals should be engaged.
Speaking in an interview, the Head of Corporate Affairs at the YEA, Emmanuel Kwasi Afriyie said the Ghana Health Service has given its consent and there is no cause for alarm.
“There is no competition between the community health nurses and the professional nurses. We acknowledged the conflict between them, but this is a World Health Organization (WHO) program approved by the African Union and the Ministry of Health to augment healthcare delivery in preventive primary care in the remote areas short of medical personnel. So it’s a stop-gap measure that will create employment for them.”