iMEM, a Foundation established to support and advocate for leadership towards transforming and sustaining the fortunes of Ghana has donated an incubator to the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of the Tema General Hospital.
The Foundation centres its efforts in leading advocacy in the areas of natural resources governance, combating corruption and creating awareness about African-ness. There is also an objective hinged on charity.
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Handing over the incubator to officials of the Tema General Hospital’s Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), the director of iMEM Foundation, Mrs Comfort Aniagyei pointed out that the gesture was to ensure that the health facility is best placed to deal with the challenges of infant mortality.
According to her, the donation is to support the Tema General Hospital improve the health of newly born babies and reduce premature deaths within Tema and its environs.
“We believe that it is right to reach out to Tema General Hospital’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit because all human life begins in a maternity room of a sort,” she remarked,
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She stated that iMEM Foundation holds the view that the donated incubator will relieve the anxiety of hard-working officials of NICU just because the Tema General Hospital does not have adequate number of incubators.
“We also understand the anxiety parents of these unfortunate babies go through all in a bid to ensure that their babies get the extra health care they require to live on after the first few days upon their entry in this world. It is in line with providing that relief iMEM Foundation donated the incubator to NICU” Mrs Aniagyei pointed.
She said it was her Foundation’s desire to reduce infant mortality and further solidify Ghana’s position on the Millennium Development Goal four which has always looked at reducing the under-five mortality.
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Receiving the donated incubator, Dr Adjoa Dsane, Medical Officer in charge of the NICU of the Tema General Hospital said the lack of incubators at the hospital is a challenge to quality health care delivery at the facility.
According to her the hospital currently has four incubators which compels officials manning the facility to put two or three pre-term babies in one incubator, a situation she described as not the best.
Dr Dsane said the Tema General Hospital is open to more donations to save lives and therefore called on well-meaning Ghanaians to come to the aid of the facility with more incubators to reduce the pressure on the functioning ones.