Telecel Foundation Launches 2025 Patient Freedom Drive

 

 

The Telecel Ghana Foundation has launched the 2025 edition of its flagship health relief initiative, Telecel Homecoming, at the Achimota Hospital in Accra, extending a lifeline to patients detained in hospitals over unpaid medical bills.

Now in its fourteenth year, the initiative reflects the Foundation’s long-standing commitment to promoting equitable healthcare access across Ghana.

Implemented in partnership with The Medical Reformist, a non-governmental organisation focused on social development and healthcare justice, the programme facilitates the discharge of insolvent patients from public hospitals nationwide.

This year’s Southern Belt phase, covering the Achimota Hospital in the Greater Accra Region, Gomoa Fetteh Hope Hospital in the Central Region, and the Sogakope District Hospital in the Volta Region, is expected to benefit about 80 patients.

The beneficiaries will be released to reunite with their families in time for the Christmas festivities.

Launched in 2011, Telecel Homecoming was conceived as a national charity initiative to tackle hospital insolvency, a challenge that continues to trap hundreds of patients in medical facilities despite recovery.

The programme settles outstanding medical bills and provides additional support, including maternity aid, laboratory fee coverage, medication, and care packages for discharged patients.

At the launch ceremony, Rita Agyeiwaa Rockson, Head of Foundation, Sustainability and External Communications at Telecel Ghana, said the initiative underscores the company’s belief that access to healthcare is a fundamental right, not a privilege.

“Every year, we see how something as simple as settling a bill can change a life, reunite a family, or restore hope. Homecoming is about giving people back their dignity, because health should never be a privilege but a right for everyone,” she said.

The event was marked by emotional scenes as staff and patients at Achimota Hospital applauded the release of several beneficiaries.

Salome Tetteh Frimpong, Deputy Chief Nursing Officer at the hospital, described the gesture as “a timely intervention” that relieves pressure on both patients and healthcare facilities.

“Some patients recover medically but are unable to go home because they can’t afford their bills. This gesture will go a long way to put smiles on the faces of discharged patients and their families. We will also ensure the donated medical supplies benefit more people and communities around us,” she stated.

The Okaikoi North Municipal Director of Health, Dr. Nafisa Maame Alhassan, commended Telecel Ghana for complementing government efforts to strengthen the healthcare system through practical social investment.

“Through Homecoming, Telecel Ghana is helping us meet one of the six critical components of health system strengthening. It’s an investment in the well-being of people within and beyond Okaikoi North. The payment of bills and donation of medical supplies will go a long way to support vulnerable patients and the hospital,” she said.

Among the newly discharged patients was Joyce Agorgor, a first-time mother who had remained in the maternity ward after delivery because she could not pay her hospital fees.

“I am very happy the Telecel Foundation has come to rescue me so I can go back home to my mother and family. I will never forget this day,” she said.

The Southern Belt phase marks the first leg of the 2025 Homecoming initiative, with subsequent discharges planned for hospitals across the Middle and Northern belts in the coming weeks.

Over the years, Telecel Homecoming has become one of Ghana’s longest-running health relief programmes within the telecommunications sector.

A Business Desk Report