TCM demand grows in treatment in Ghana
Despite the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, there is an increasing demand for traditional Chinese medicine in the treatment of common ailments in Ghana.
At the China Natural Herbal Hospital, a private herbal facility at Pokuase, a suburb of Accra, the Ghanaian capital, Leticia Mensah, a 30-year-old patient, says she has been living with menstrual cramps and chest pains since she first had her menstruation almost two decades ago.
"I have been on so many drugs before," says Leticia during a visit to the private facility that treats ailments of patients with a combination of local and Chinese herbal formulas.
Having gone to the outpatient department of the hospital for the necessary vital statistics to be taken with other examinations conducted, Leticia was finally prepared for the therapy room to undergo acupuncture treatment.
Seth Kwame Nkrumah, a Chinese-trained acupuncturist, skillfully and patiently pierced several acupuncture needles on certain parts of the patient's body for acupuncture treatment. The patient then lay for a while. After between 45 minutes and an hour, the acupuncturist carefully removed the needles.
Having gone through the TCM treatment, Leticia says she felt the pain had vanished from her body.
"I feel much better now, the pains I was having have suddenly vanished. I mean I am OK. It feels like magic to me, because it is my first experience and I am actually glad I did it," she says.
Nkrumah says there is a growing trend for locals to adopt TCM as its efficacy proves to be good.
"TCM, especially acupuncture, provides that efficacy. It is easier for patients to accept it," says the acupuncturist, who has urged Ghanaians to incorporate local medicine with TCM to treat their diseases.
As TCM is gaining popularity in the West African country, many acupuncture clinics run by Chinese doctors are popping up in the country.
The China Natural Herbal Hospital has been established by Ghanaian businessman Alex Bediako Mensah, now chief executive officer after his fruitful encounter with the therapeutic effects of TCM in 2012.
Mensah came to develop an interest in TCM, and with the help of a Chinese woman he set up a small clinic specializing in TCM. Eight years on, the facility has subsequently grown into a bigger herbal hospital.
The hospital treats patients with a combination of local and Chinese herbal formulas. It supports this with the application of cupping, acupuncture, acupressure, massage and physiotherapy, and treats cardiovascular diseases, stroke, malaria, numbness, arthritis, among many other diseases.
"I will always be a firm believer in promoting TCM in Ghana," he says.