Korle-Bu
Management
reacts
to
CHRAJ's
comments
on
"detention"
of
Patients
Accra,
Dec.
17,
GNA-
Management
of
the
Korle-Bu
Teaching
Hospital
on
Friday
suggested
to
the
Commission
of
Human
Rights
and
Administrative
Justice
(CHRAJ),
to
rather
ensure
that
Ghanaians
registered
with
the
National
Health
Insurance
Scheme
(NHIS)
so
they
will
enjoy
free
medical
care.
It
said
the
interest
of
the
so
called
"detained"
patients,
which
the
Commission
has
termed
as
illegal,
would
have
been
better
served
if
the
Commission
had
called
for
such
people
to
register
with
the
NHIS
and
ensure
that
the
National
Commission
on
Civic
Education
educate
the
public
on
the
need
to
register
with
the
NHIS
or
pay
their
medical
bills
when
they
go
to
the
hospital.
It
said
government,
recognizing
the
difficulties
some
patients
go
through
in
paying
their
medical
bills,
have
introduced
the
NHIS
as a
way
of
making
health
care
accessible
to
all,
including
the
core
poor,
who
cannot
even
pay
their
health
insurance
premiums.
The
hospital's
suggestion
was
in
response
to
recent
comments
made
by
CHRAJ
Commissioner,
Ms
Anna
Bossman
that
the
"detention"
of
patients
at
hospital,
especially
nursing
mothers
who
were
not
able
to
pay
for
their
medical
bills,
were
illegal
and
described
it
as
an
infringement
on
their
on
human
rights.
Dr.
Ben
Annan,
Director
of
Medical
Services
of
the
Hospital,
who
read
the
Management's
response
noted
that
"Korle-Bu
does
not
detain
patients.
People
rather
wrongly
term
the
period
during
which
the
Social
Welfare
Unit
of
the
hospital
conducts
investigations
into
their
socio-economic
background
of
patients
as a
period
of
"detention".
He
explained
that
some
of
the
nursing
mothers
normally
feign
inability
to
pay
their
medical
bills
and
abscond
from
the
hospital
in
the
process
of
investigating
their
backgrounds
adding
that
the
hospital
has
lost
over
one
billion
cedis
from
2001
to
2005
through
1,977
patients
who
have
run
away
without
paying
their
medical
bills.
"We
need
to
exercise
greater
circumspection
when
it
comes
to
commenting
on
methods
of
funding
healthcare
for
people.
A
good
number
of
those
who
claim
they
are
unable
to
pay
for
their
bills
are
mostly
saying
so
with
the
hope
that
a
philanthropist
will
come
to
their
aid
and
this
should
be
discouraged".
Dr
Annan
explained
that
the
hospital
has
from
2001
to
2005
granted
waivers
to
1,614
patients
who
were
declared
insolvent
with
the
total
of
over
2
billion
cedis.
He
said
the
hospital
run
a
scheme
that
allow
patients
who
have
been
discharged
to
pay
their
bills
by
installments
and
also
get
either
a
relation
or
proxy
to
guarantee
that,
when
they
have
gone
home.
The
hospital's
Management
urged
CHRAJ
to
make
the
findings
of a
research
it
is
conducting
in
the
hospital
for
discussion
and
explanations
before
going
public.
GNA