Ghana’s public healthcare system is under intense strain as thousands of nurses and midwives embark on a nationwide strike, disrupting essential services across the country.
The industrial action, led by the Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives Association (GRNMA), follows a controversial government directive annulling public sector appointments made after December 7, 2024, a move that threatens the employment of over 5,000 recently recruited health professionals.
The strike action, which began in early June 2025, is already being felt in hospitals and clinics nationwide, as frontline care delivery grinds to a halt. In many facilities, outpatient departments have closed, and emergency services are operating at minimal capacity.
The GRNMA has warned that the full withdrawal of services will persist unless the government reverses the decision and guarantees job security for the affected workers.
This development marks one of the most serious labor disputes in Ghana’s healthcare sector in recent years. With an already stretched workforce, the sudden withdrawal of thousands of professionals poses a critical risk to maternal care, emergency response, and chronic disease management.
The roots of the crisis lie in a directive issued by the Office of the Chief of Staff in February 2025, ordering the termination of all public service appointments made after the December 7 cutoff date.
The directive has been widely criticized by health unions, who argue that it unfairly targets professionals who were recruited through official procedures.
The GRNMA contends that many of the affected workers had already been deployed and were delivering critical care.
“This is not just about paperwork or politics, it’s about lives,” said a senior GRNMA spokesperson. “The government cannot afford to destabilize the very backbone of the healthcare system at a time when patient demand is increasing.”
The strike also sheds light on deeper systemic issues within Ghana’s health sector. For years, nurses and midwives have raised concerns about irregular postings, delayed financial clearance, and a lack of adequate working conditions.
These unresolved challenges continue to trigger waves of dissatisfaction among healthcare workers, leading to repeated strike threats.
Earlier in 2024, health worker unions had demanded improvements in posting processes, rent and rural allowances, and the resolution of payroll backlogs. Many of these grievances remain unresolved, and the latest crisis appears to be a culmination of prolonged government inaction.
Hospitals in regions such as the Upper East, Ashanti, and Greater Accra have already reported significant disruptions.
In Accra’s Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, operations have been scaled back to emergency-only services, with patients being turned away or redirected to private clinics.
Healthcare analysts warn that if the strike persists, it could have long-term implications for Ghana’s public health outcomes. Not only does it risk increasing maternal and infant mortality rates, but it may also erode public trust in the health system’s reliability.
The government has acknowledged the disruption and says it is reviewing the appointments in question. However, no official reversal of the directive has been announced. Without swift resolution, the strike could extend well into the coming weeks, deepening Ghana’s healthcare crisis.
For investors and public sector analysts, the unfolding scenario highlights the urgent need for systemic reform in healthcare staffing and human resource policies.
A robust, well-supported workforce is essential for Ghana to meet its healthcare development goals and ensure resilience against future health emergencies.
