U.S. delivers critical medical supplies to Ghana

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The United States government has made available about 2,500 kilograms of medical cargo and supplies provided by the U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit Three (NAMRU-3) Ghana Detachment.

The items, delivered by the U.S. Air Force C-130J aircraft from the 86th Airlift Wing in Ramstein Air Base, Germany, which arrived at Kotoka International Airport yesterday, included ribonucleic acid, a nucleic acid (RNA) extraction kits, reagents, and viral collection swabs.

Others include universal and viral transport media to collect and store specimens, and the replenishment of other consumable lab supplies.

According to a statement from the U.S. Embassy in Accra, the items were originally ordered in January 2020 to support NAMRU-3 Ghana Detachment research efforts, specifically ongoing influenza surveillance, in partnership with Ghana’s National Influenza Center at the Noguchi Memorial Institute of Medical Research, the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, and the Kumasi Centre of Collaborative Research (KCCR) in Tropical Medicine.

The U.S. Ambassador to Ghana Stephanie S. Sullivan noted that the delivery of the medical supplies underscores the results of the growing partnership between the United States of America and the Republic of Ghana to combat COVID-19, to save lives and protect the people of this nation.

She said: “As confirmed cases gradually made their way to West Africa and eventually Ghana, these essential laboratory supplies became even more critical during this rapidly evolving crisis and would have remained stranded in Manchester, U.K., until sometime in May if not for the assistance of the U.S. Air Force.”

Ambassador Sullivan commended the Government of Ghana for its strong efforts to combat this pandemic, and we are pleased to partner in its leading efforts.

The Command’s Director for Logistics, Air Force Brig. Gen. Leo Kosinski, said the emergence of COVID-19 has introduced some new hurdles we have had to consider in U.S. Africa Command’s Area of Responsibility.

He said the “Movement of this shipment of critical medical supplies from the United Kingdom to Ghana represents one of many logistics moves executed recently despite operating in one of the most logistically challenging theaters to move people and materiel.

He emphasized that the fact that so many professionals from multiple commands quickly came together to work through this particular requirement highlights our amazing and unique team of professionals. “They are working together every day for the interests of the American people and our global partners even in the toughest of circumstances.”

The April 24 delivery of medical supplies to Ghana follows other critical U.S. military support in the health sector, such as the delivery of two state-of-the-art Level II Field Hospitals that Ambassador Sullivan handed over to the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) on February 4 on behalf of the United States through the U.S. Government’s Africa Peacekeeping Rapid Response Partnership program.  One of these hospitals is already being utilized to support the Government of Ghana’s COVID-19 response efforts in Accra, the Embassy’s statement stated.

NAMRU-3 Ghana Detachment is a collaborator within the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch Global Emerging Infections Surveillance partner network and has supported influenza surveillance for both human and avian influenza strains in Ghana since 2007.

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