Medical professionals surrounding a child patient are taking notes.
Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative

The Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative is developing innovative and sustainable emergency medicine training programs for physicians, nurses and medical students in Ghana. 

Our goal is to improve patient outcomes by increasing the number of skilled emergency health care workers and strengthening local medical education systems.

Our Mission
The mission of the Collaborative is to improve the provision of emergency medical care in Ghana through innovative and sustainable physician, nursing, and medical student training programs. These programs will increase the number of qualified emergency health care workers retained over time in areas where they are most needed.
Goals & Objectives

The Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative intends to develop an innovative, interdisciplinary, sustainable, team-based medical training program to improve the management of injury and acute medical conditions, while retaining skilled health care providers in Ghana. The aim is to increase Emergency Medicine capacity by creating high quality, locally based training programs.

See how the Collaborative is transforming lives for Ghanaians and U-M medical students.

Our History

In 2001, following the collapse of the Accra Sports Stadium that killed 127 Ghanaians, the Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons identified Emergency Medicine as a specialty in urgent need of development. The collapse is considered to be the worst stadium disaster in African history. 

A national commission on the state of Emergency Medicine in Ghana was established composed of the Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons, National Ambulance Service, Ministry of Health, Ghana Health Service, and other national stakeholders. The public response to the stadium disaster prompted the Ghanaian government to construct a new national Accident and Emergency Center in Kumasi. 

Group picture of ghana medical group

The Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons approached the University of Michigan Department of Emergency Medicine in 2007 to collaborate on the development of a postgraduate training program. 

Building on previously successful collaborations with the University of Michigan Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the School of Public Health, a partnership was created with the Ghanaian federal agencies, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH), and the University Of Michigan Department Of Emergency Medicine. The primary goal of the partnership was to improve the provision and outcomes of emergency care in Ghana by developing an Emergency Medicine training program.

Funding

The Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative is funded by the Medical Education Partnership Initiative of the National Institutes of Health Fogarty International Center, with additional support from the University of Michigan Department of Emergency Medicine and the University of Michigan Center for Global Health.

This project is supported by NIH Grant 1R24TW008899-01, funded by the U.S. Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator and National Institutes of Health.

In 2010, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) received a MEPI Pilot Grant in partnership with the University of Michigan to support the Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative. 

The award is part of a $130 million, five year initiative by the National Institutes of Health Fogarty International Center to: 

  1. Train and retain 140,000 new health care workers in Sub-Saharan Africa 
  2. Strengthen medical education systems
  3. Build clinical and research capacity to retain medical faculty. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Partners With PEPFAR to Transform African Medical Education With A $130 Million Investment. 

Read more at the National Institutes of Health website

Get Involved
Contact us to learn more about the Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative:
Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative
University of Michigan – Dept. of Emergency Medicine
24 Frank Lloyd Wright, Suite H-3200
PO Box 443
Ann Arbor, MI 48106
Phone: 734-936-9312
Our Graduate Raves

The Ghana collaborative model was one of the main reasons I wanted to come to The U-M Medical School for residency. The global health track has allowed me to explore many aspects of humanitarian medicine from prisoner health issues, refugee medicine, climate change and disaster medicine.

-Alex Miller, MD, Class of 2022