Abstract

BackgroundScience, technology and innovation have long played a role in Ghana’s vision for development, including in improving its health outcomes. However, so far little research has been conducted on Ghana’s capacity for health innovation to address local diseases. This research aims to fill that gap, mapping out the key actors involved, highlighting examples of indigenous innovation, setting out the challenges ahead and outlining recommendations for strengthening Ghana’s health innovation system.MethodsCase study research methodology was used. Data were collected through reviews of academic literature and policy documents and through open-ended, face-to-face interviews with 48 people from across the science-based health innovation system. Data was collected over three visits to Ghana from February 2007 to August 2008, and stakeholders engaged subsequently.ResultsGhana has strengths which could underpin science-based health innovation in the future, including health and biosciences research institutions with strong foreign linkages and donor support; a relatively strong regulatory system which is building capacity in other West African countries; the beginnings of new funding forms such as venture capital; and the return of professionals from the diaspora, bringing expertise and contacts. Some health products and services are already being developed in Ghana by individual entrepreneurs, which are innovative in the sense of being new to the country and, in some cases, the continent. They include essential medicines, raw pharmaceutical materials, new formulations for pediatric use and plant medicines at various stages of development.ConclusionsWhile Ghana has many institutions concerned with health research and its commercialization, their ability to work together to address clear health goals is low. If Ghana is to capitalize on its assets, including political and macroeconomic stability which underpin investment in health enterprises, it needs to improve the health innovation environment through increasing support for its small firms; coordinating policies; and beginning a dialogue with donors on how health research can create locally-owned knowledge and be more demand-driven. Mobilizing stakeholders around health product development areas, such as traditional medicines and diagnostics, would help to create trust between groups and build a stronger health innovation system.

Highlights

  • Science, technology and innovation have long played a role in Ghana’s vision for development, including in improving its health outcomes

  • The results presented here are from the New Patriotic Party (NPP) period but, where significant developments have since occurred under the New Democratic Congress (NDC), these are indicated

  • Ghana’s Poverty Reduction Strategy II (GPRS II), which sets the target for Ghana to achieve a per capita income of at least US$1000 by the year 2015, sees stableScience and technology (S&T) as underpinning industrial growth, encouraging the ‘adoption of appropriate technologies, both local and foreign, with the capacity to improve productivity and efficiency in the agricultural, industrial and services sectors’

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Technology and innovation have long played a role in Ghana’s vision for development, including in improving its health outcomes. Little research has been conducted on Ghana’s capacity for health innovation to address local diseases. Ghana’s guiding policy documents cite the importance of S&T for improving productivity and socioeconomic outcomes [4,5,6]. Investment in universities and research institutions is low, and several studies still show Ghana to be a poor adopter, user and generator of technology [7,8]. Foreign firms cite Ghana’s lack of human resources, poor infrastructure, and low levels of technology as their main barriers to increased foreign investment [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call