
Ghana’s Health Minister, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, has served notice that the government’s patience with medical doctors who refuse rural postings is expiring, reiterating on Friday, February 20 that the names of all non-compliant doctors will be struck from the payroll by the end of February 2026.
The ultimatum is the sharpest enforcement step yet in a standoff that has stretched across months. In December 2025, the Minister issued a one-week ultimatum after data from the Ghana Health Service (GHS) showed that seven out of every ten newly posted medical officers had failed to report to their assigned districts, with several regions recording zero arrivals despite formal posting letters being issued.
The scale of non-compliance in specific regions has been particularly alarming. During a working visit to Oti Region in early February 2026, Akandoh disclosed that of the 25 medical doctors posted to the region in 2025, only two had reported for duty, leaving several health facilities operating without a single doctor and creating severe care gaps for communities in one of Ghana’s most underserved zones.
The minister has also pointed to a damaging geographic concentration of medical talent, noting that nearly half of all doctors in Ghana are based in Greater Accra, making redistribution not a punitive act but a structural necessity. His position has been consistent: posting doctors to rural and district facilities is not a punishment but the primary instrument through which the country will close the gap between urban and rural healthcare.
The government has not relied solely on enforcement. Akandoh announced a 20 percent allowance on top of basic salary for health workers who accept rural postings, a financial incentive designed to make district and community placements more economically attractive relative to urban private sector alternatives. He has also personally engaged stakeholders including Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives (MMDCEs) to arrange decent accommodation for posted staff, acknowledging that inadequate housing is one of the structural deterrents that discourages compliance.
During a visit to the University of Ghana Medical Centre (UGMC), Akandoh was direct about the urban overcrowding problem: “Accra and Kumasi are choked,” he told the medical community, adding that redistribution was inevitable and necessary and that no amount of preference for urban postings would change the ministry’s deployment calculus.
The 2026 national budget has allocated GH¢600 million for the construction of three new regional hospitals in Oti, Savannah and Western North regions, part of a broader infrastructure investment aimed at improving the facilities and working environments that doctors frequently cite as deterrents to rural service. The government’s Agenda 111 district hospital construction programme is also being accelerated to ensure that posted doctors arrive to functional, equipped facilities rather than dilapidated structures.
The February 28 payroll deadline now represents the clearest line the ministry has drawn. For doctors yet to report to their assigned districts, the message from the minister is unambiguous: the state has offered incentives, engaged stakeholders, arranged accommodation, and extended deadlines. What remains is compliance.