Accra, July 9, GNA – In a demonstration of resilience, visionary leadership, and renewed investment in healthcare, Ghana Medical Trust Fund has inaugurated a reconstructed and expanded Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory at the National Cardiothoracic Centre of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital.
This is to restore one of the country’s most critical lifesaving facilities barely a year after it was destroyed by fire.
The inauguration marks more than the reopening of a medical facility.
A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency in Accra on Thursday said It represented restoration of hope for thousands of Ghanaians living with cardiovascular diseases and reinforced the country’s determination to strengthen specialist healthcare infrastructure despite adversity.
Speaking at the inauguration ceremony, the Administrator of the Ghana Medical Trust Fund (GMTF), Adjoa Obuobia Darko-Opoku, described the occasion as a defining moment in Ghana’s healthcare journey.
“Every nation, in its journey, will face a moment that tests not its resources, but its resolve. Today, Ghana answers that test,” she declared, adding that the country had gathered “to restore a lifeline, reclaim a critical pillar of our national health security, and affirm that we do not abandon what saves lives.”


The original Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory, commissioned in January 2017 by President John Dramani Mahama before handing over, transformed cardiac care in Ghana for eight years by enabling complex heart procedures that previously required patients to travel abroad.
However, that progress came to an abrupt halt when a devastating fire destroyed the facility on March 7, 2025, severely disrupting emergency cardiac interventions at the country’s premier referral hospital.
Determined to reverse the setback, the Ghana Medical Trust Fund stepped in.
Following an assessment visit in January 2026, the Trust Fund resolved not merely to rebuild the laboratory but to create a more advanced and expanded facility capable of meeting the growing burden of cardiovascular disease in Ghana.
“Reconstruction began on February 17, 2026, and less than five months later, the state-of-the-art laboratory now stands ready to serve the nation”.
According to the Administrator, the new Cath Lab is “not a replica of what was lost,” but “a superior successor”; fully reconstructed, technologically upgraded, significantly expanded in capacity, and designed to deliver faster, safer and more advanced cardiac care.
The impact of the new facility called the Ghana Medical Trust Fund’s Cardiac Catheterization laboratory is expected to be immediate.
“ Even before officially resuming full operations, the laboratory will host a landmark cardiac intervention programme in collaboration with the National Cardiothoracic Centre, specialist cardiologists from the United States, the Mount Carmel Foundation, Africa World Airlines and the Ghana Medical Trust Fund. Beginning July 12, thirty patients selected from across Ghana will undergo complex Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device procedures, offering lifesaving treatment that many would otherwise struggle to access.
The project also reflects the broader mandate of the Ghana Medical Trust Fund, established to support patients battling chronic non-communicable diseases while investing in specialist training, modern medical infrastructure and research. Beyond paying medical bills for vulnerable patients, the Trust Fund says it is committed to building a resilient healthcare system capable of delivering world-class specialist care within Ghana.
The Administrator praised President Mahama for providing the leadership that made the reconstruction possible, noting that few leaders have the unique opportunity to both commission a transformative national project and return years later to restore it after tragedy.
She stressed that the significance of the facility goes beyond bricks and machines.
“This Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory is where science meets compassion, where expertise meets equity, and where families can receive lifesaving care with dignity,” she said.
As the Trust Fund expands similar specialist facilities across the country, the reconstructed Cath Lab at Korle Bu is expected to become a symbol of a new era in healthcare; one where quality cardiac care is increasingly accessible, resilient and home-grown.
GNA
Edited by George-Ramsey Benamba