Tamale Hospital CEO accuses staff of stealing
The Chief Executive Officer of the Tamale
Teaching Hospital (TTH), Dr. Ken Sagoe has decried the increasing rate
at which staff of the hospital have been looting properties of the
institution especially consumables resulting in huge loss to the
facility.
He complained that because of the weak security system
in the hospital, some negative characters had cultivated a negative
attitude of re-selling drugs and other consumables back to suppliers and
warned that steps were being taken to bring the perpetrators to book.
Dr.
Sagoe, who said this in Tamale during the 2012 annual performance
review, indicated that gloves, detergents were the most stolen items
from the facility, adding that some of the suppliers do come back to
them to reveal the syndicate.
“Some private clinics even have gloves
and gauz with TTH inscription on them…We are yet to quantify the cost of
the stealing syndicate”, he said.
Asked what the hospital was doing
about the phenomenon, he indicated that the nefarious activity was being
carried out by staff, including some essential staff, making it
difficult to curtail it but noted plans were underway to stop the
practice.
The CEO also expressed worry about the decreasing
financial assistance to the hospital from the Government and requested
for urgent support to augment the rising cost of the hospital in
retaining critical staff, which were badly needed, to promote the
excellence agenda of the facility.
Dr. Sagoe, who also announced his
retirement from the end of the year, noted that the hospital spent
GHc1.2 million last year to retain critical staff while GHc1.550 million
was spent between 2010 and 2012 in accommodation for staff.
He
said the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was indebted to the
hospital to the sum of GHc2.2 million and the delay in payment was
having negative impact in the operations of the hospital and appealed to
the Ministry of Health to assist the hospital overcome its
difficulties.
GNA
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