School for the Deaf’s clinic has no medicine

By
Laudia Sawer

Adjei-Kojo (GAR), Oct. 15, GNA – The
Tetteh-Ocloo State School for the Deaf at Adjei-Kojo in the Tema West
Municipality has no medicine in its school clinic.

The medicine shelves of the school-based
clinic are empty as medicines received for this year from the children of Dr
Seth Tetteh-Ocloo, the founder of the school, has been used up by the pupils.

The school which has a population of 291
pupils comprising of 145 girls and 146 boys with ages ranging from four to 28
years, is a public school which catered for children with hearing disability.

Miss Grace Otoo, Senior Enrolled Nurse,
in-charge of the clinic, said Dr Tetteh-Ocloo’s children who established the
clinic, to cater for the health needs of the pupils, annually provided it with
the needed accessories and drugs.

Miss Otoo, speaking to the Ghana News Agency
on the sidelines of a donation programme, added that the Tema Metropolitan
Health Directorate, also provided it with some drugs but they had exhausted
all.

She noted that the clinic which run for 24
hours daily and treated students, most of whom were boarders, of malaria,
infections, cough, wound dressing, among other minor illnesses.

She also revealed that most of the girls also
depended on the clinic for their monthly supply of sanitary pads since their
parents failed to do so adding that she sometimes had to share one pad each for
them instead of a pack as they improvised with toilet-roll.

Miss Otoo therefore pleaded with organizations
and individuals to help provide some of the medications and sanitary pads.

Some of the needed drugs included pain
killers, malaria treatment drugs, blood tonics, multivitamins, sutures, poviden
iodine, and sterile bandages, rubbing alcohols, antibiotics and colodium among
others.

GNA

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