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Children with cleft not cursed – CEO of Korle-Bu

• Some of the parents with their children cured of cleft condition

Some of the parents with their children cured of cleft condition

     The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH), Dr Opoku Ware Ampomah, has asked Ghanaians to disregard myths and misconceptions surrounding children born with cleft, insisting that such children are not cursed.

    According to him, cleft was a med­ical condition that can be corrected by surgery within 45 minutes.

    However, due to stigmatisation, parents of such children often hide them at home, denying them oppor­tunity to receive treatment which later affect them in life.

    Dr Ampomah made the disclosure last week at a press conference to mark the cleft awareness week ob­served on August 26-29, 2024.

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    Operation Smile is a global non­profit service organisation that bridges the gap in access to essential surgeries and health care, starting with cleft surgery and comprehensive care.

    It also provides medical expertise, training, mentorship, research and care through its dedicated staff and volunteers around the world, work­ing alongside local governments, nonprofits and health systems, and supported by generous donors and corporate partner

    The period was one the Operation Smile team will educate Ghanaians on various media platforms.

    According Dr Ampomah most chil­dren with cleft were often said to have been stroked by an evil spirit, cursed, or were children born out of adultery or facing punishment from God.

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    But he indicated that “cleft is not a curse, it is a medical condition that is surgically correctable in a 45 minute surgery.”

    He explained that cleft was a con­dition that occurs in the early stages of pregnancy, resulting the cleft lip or cleft palate.

    Cleft lip is an opening or split in the upper lip that occurs when developing facial structures in an unborn baby do not close completely.

    A cleft palate is an opening or split in the roof of the mouth that occurs when the tissue does not fuse together during development in the womb.

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    He said a child with cleft condition finds it difficult to breast feed, hear or speak and mostly produce nasal sounds when they speak.

    Dr Ampomah, who is also the Medi­cal Director for Operation Smile said the condition was caused genetically while there were also environmental factors that could cause it.

    Some of the environmental factors, he said, were alcohol use, smoking, drug abuse and lack of vitamin B (folic acid) during pregnancy.

    He said heavy metals and toxin from galamsey sites which pollute water bodies could result in cleft problems, adding that “with the ‘galamsey’ activities, I will not be surprised if there are increases in the cleft conditions, we do not have to wait for it to happen.”

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    Dr Ampomah said Operation Smile was the largest provider of cleft care in Ghana since it started operation in 2011, adding that it provides free and safe surgeries to both children and adults.

    He advised women to stop taking unprescribed drugs and visit the hospital when there are challenges to avoid such conditions.

    Mr Henry Quist, the Acting Country Manager of Operation Smile-Ghana, encouraged parents and guardians with cleft children to take advantage of their outreaches to correct the condition.

    According to him, surgery could be performed on babies with cleft lip from three to six months and for those with palate, between nine and 12 months of birth.

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     By Jemima Esinam Kuatsinu

    News

    Craze for x’mas shopping:  Crowded markets, low patronage

    • Traders display their items

     Vendors of food and other wares associated with the Christmas cele­bration have expressed surprise at the low patronage despite the increased number of visitors to some of the ma­jor markets across the capital.

    Four days to the celebration(Christ­mas), the markets are filled with vari­ous products ranging from food, cloth­ing, livestock and many other stuff, but according to the vendors, patrons are doing more ‘window’ shopping.

    The Spectator on visits to some of the markets in the capital, notably the Odawna, Makola, Accra Central Business District, New Town and others made similar observations as shoppers crowd them but did little in terms of purchases.

    The paper also observed that ma­jority of vendors, originally selling other wares have switched to product related to the festive season.

     What it means is that there are a lot more clothes, food and vege­tables, livestock and poultry, toys, firecrackers, drinks of different types and many others on display.

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    The markets have also stretched to the pedestrian pavement, leaving very nar­row spaces for commuters to move about freely.

    That, in addition to a few of the female vendors dressed in coloured attires to reflect the occasion, has heightened the euphoria, leaving the low sales as the only headache for the vendors.

    Speaking with this paper, they sounded very optimistic, believing that sales would improve in the last few days to the yule­tide.

    According to them, there was the oppor­tunity to sell beyond Christmas as the New Year celebration offers similar opportunity to trade the same wares.

    They urged patrons to throng the mar­kets to shop since prices were quite mod­erate and products affordable for all.

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     Retirement service for Elder John Ackom-Asante,3 others

     Retired Deputy Editor of The Spec­tator, Elder John Ackom-Asante, was last Sunday honoured by the Church of Pentecost Windy Hills District in Kasoa in the Central Region, with a retirement thanksgiv­ing service, after serving for 26 year as an Elder of the church.

    He was honoured with a citation and certif­icate of service along with three other elders who served in the capacity for various years.

    Elder Ackom-Asante was baptised at the Darkuman Central Assembly in 1979 and or­dained as an Elder in 1997.

    The citation read “Your selfless service, zeal, willingness to relate wholeheartedly and your desire to effect change has gone a long way to shape the lives of many people in the church and the nation over the 26 years of your dedication to the service of the Lord.”

    Elder Ackom- Asante held many positions at the Darkuman Central Assembly, Obuasi in the Ashanti Region and Tema, serving in various capacities as youth and evange­lism ministry lead­er and marriage counsellor.

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    He was the founding member of the Darkuman Christian Fellowship, a member of the Greater Accra Chris­tian Fellowship; member of Bible Society of Ghana; founding member Obuasi Chapter Full Gospel Busi­nessmen Fellowship Interna­tional and founding member of New Times Corporation Christian Fellowship and Chaplain, Methodist Universi­ty Tema Campus 2009- 2010.

    As a professional journal­ist, Elder Ackom-Asante com­bined effectively and effi­ciently his duty as a member and elder of the church and the demands of his profes­sion, with admiration from the church, kith and kin, till his retirement on December

     From Alhaji Salifu Abdul-Rahaman, Kasoa

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