Cabinet has given policy approval for the submission to Parliament of a Bill to decentralise the registration of births and deaths in the country.
The Bill, which was submitted to Cabinet by the Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, Hajia Alima Mahama, was approved two weeks ago.
The Bill, when passed into law, would provide more efficient births and deaths registration system and its effective decentralisation.
Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia made the disclosure when he paid a surprise visit to the Headquarters of the Births and Deaths Registry on Thursday to familiarise himself with its operations.
He noted that the Bill also seeks to expand the births and deaths registration coverage nationwide; devolve the functions of births and deaths registration to Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies and ensure consistency of the births and deaths registration system with the Local Government Act, 2016 (Act 936).
The Registry has been undertaking public education and awareness creation and capacity building of staff, which had yielded an increase in birth registration coverage from 17 per cent in 2001 to an all-time high level of 80 per cent in 2019.
This achievement is, however, still below the UN standard of 90 per cent coverage.
Vice President Bawumia expressed delight at the rapid pace of work on the digitisation of the paper records of the Registry, which would allow for the integration of its database with other state agencies, further streamlining service delivery.
“I am happy to learn that thus far 80% of the paper records have been digitised and we should see the process completed by the end of this year or latest early next year.
When completed, the database of the births and deaths registry will be integrated with that of the National Identification Authority (NIA) for the issuance of a single NIA number for everyone from birth to death,” he said.
“It is expected that this database will also be integrated into other agencies such as SSNIT and NHIA as part of ongoing efforts by the Akufo-Addo government to make the provision of public services easier.”
The current administrative, institutional and operational architecture for the registration of births and deaths in Ghana under the 1965 Law (Act 301) has become obsolete, according to experts.
Among other defects, it fails to provide for the registration of surrogate births; notification of births and deaths by supervising professionals such as nurses and traditional birth attendants; and the use of electronic technology for the capture, transmission and storage of births and deaths data.
Additionally, the weak integration of the Births and Deaths Registry with the data and statistics departments of other government agencies, including health facilities and MMDAs are identified limitations with Act 301.
Also, the existing 414 registration centres in the country are woefully inadequate and fall way below the UN minimum standard requirement for a country of Ghana’s size of a minimum of 6,000 registration centres.
The shortfall has created service delivery deficit, insufficient data on births and deaths in the country, and ultimately a lack of meaningful demographic analysis for the nation, affecting planning.
Reverend Asare Addo, the Principal Assistant Registrar, showed the Vice President around the processes and records of the Registry, including the 1912 Register, which contains the Gold Coast first attempt at recording births.
He indicated that efforts were underway to ensure the establishment of a birth and deaths registry in every government hospital and every district in the country.
Several engagements had also taken place between the technical staff of the NIA and the Registry to work out a smooth integration of records, he said.
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