A 10-Member Steering Committee to spearhead efforts in aligning health delivery services within the Ghana Health Service (GHS) to the government's "24-hour Economy" policy has been inaugu­rated in Accra yesterday.Chaired by the Director-General of the GHS, Professor Samuel Kaba Akoriyea, the Committee is tasked with providing oversight, policy direction and institutional coordina­tion across all levels of the health system to ensure round-the-clock delivery of healthcare nationwide.Its mandate includes the restructuring of recruitment and deployment of the health workforce with a focus on shift systems and night-duty protocols, while strengthening health infrastructure, including lighting, securi­ty, power supply and staff accommodation, in line with the policy.It will also work to enhance supervision, digital retooling, and referral systems par­ticularly for night-time services and develop strategies to ensure the financial sustainability of 24-hour healthcare operations through strategic resource planning and collaboration with partners such as the National Health In­surance Authority (NHIA), the private sector and other stakeholders.Inaugurating the committee, Prof.

Akoriyea acknowledged that while the health sector has made significant progress through major in­terventions and policies such as the Commu­nity-based Health Planning Services (CHPS), the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) and the expansion of emergency care over the years, challenges remain in ensur­ing continuous operation particularly during night-time and in underserved areas."Emergencies do not operate by calendar.

Our system must be able to meet this reality, not just in isolated facilities or during crisis but as a national standard," he said.Prof.

Akoriyea stressed that the committee has the role "to ensure that the health sector's alignment with the 24-hour economy is not just technically sound but strategically sequent, contextually relevant and fully institutional.""Our task is not to create a parallel system but to strengthen what we already have and to stretch this responsibility across time to ensure a balance of innovation and reliability," he added.Dr Ebenezer Oduro-Mensah, the Deputy Director of Clinical Services Department, giv­ing an overview of the health sector alignment to 24-hour policy, stressed the urgent need for the sector to adapt to save lives and promote longevity."Emergencies, maternal deliveries, acci­dents, respiratory distress, mental health crises, and night-time injuries are realities of daily life.