Sensible budgets are not Ghana’s forte. But there is hope
A new initiative is ranking spending ideas by costs and benefits
TUBERCULOSIS IS A terrible disease. It destroys lungs from the inside out, leaving sufferers coughing up the bloody remains. In Ghana too few people are diagnosed in time: the disease kills over 15,000 people a year, about 5% of all deaths. But a recent pilot scheme shows that diagnosis can be faster and more accurate simply by whisking samples from clinics that lack the latest testing technology to the nearest well-equipped testing centre. This could save more than 3,000 lives in six years if plans to scale up were followed through. Since the benefits are estimated at 166 times the costs over 20 years, the scheme is patently a fine idea.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “High noon for half-bridges”
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