
The Municipal Hospital in Dunkwa-on-Offin has been plunged into a healthcare crisis following a total depletion of its medical oxygen supply. As of June 5, 2023, the facility reached a critical breaking point, exhausting its emergency buffer cylinders and leaving oxygen-dependent patients in a precarious situation. This shortage has triggered an immediate evacuation protocol, particularly impacting the hospital's most vulnerable patients in the paediatric and neonatal units, as the facility can no longer sustain life-saving respiratory support.
Internal communications circulated among hospital staff confirmed that the facility's reserves were completely drained by midnight on Sunday. The shortage has hit the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) the hardest, where newborns often rely on consistent oxygen support for survival. In response to the life-threatening deficit, hospital management has been forced to refer all patients requiring respiratory support to the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) in Kumasi. This move, while necessary to save lives, places additional strain on the nation's second-largest teaching hospital and complicates care for families who must now travel significant distances to remain with their children.
Despite the gravity of the situation, hospital authorities have indicated that technical interventions are currently underway. Maintenance engineers have been dispatched to the facility to troubleshoot and resolve the underlying issues causing the supply failure, whether mechanical or logistical. Crucially, as of the latest reports, no fatalities have been linked directly to the oxygen stockout, suggesting that the referral process was initiated in time to prevent loss of life. The hospital remains in a high-alert state as it awaits the restoration of its supply chain to resume normal operations in its intensive care wards.
This incident highlights the fragile nature of medical supply chains in municipal health facilities across Ghana. The reliance on centralized referral points like KATH during localized equipment or supply failures underscores the urgent need for more robust regional healthcare infrastructure and more reliable emergency reserves. Until the oxygen supply is stabilized and the technical faults are cleared, the Dunkwa Municipal Hospital remains unable to provide critical care for respiratory cases, leaving the community dependent on emergency transfers for life-saving treatment.
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