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NGO Reg. No. CG01387022  ·  Registered in Ghana

Fighting Sickle Cell
Disease in Ghana One Life at a Time.

The Sickle Cell Disease Support Group of Ghana advocates for patients, drives free newborn screening, and builds a community of hope across every region of Ghana.

SCDSG Impact at a Glance

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World Sickle Cell Day 2026 — Closing the Survival Gap: Equity in Sickle Cell Care
June 19  ·  World Sickle Cell Day 2026

Know Your Genotype. Protect the Next Generation by Ending the SCD Cycle.

Join SCDSG in marking World Sickle Cell Day 2026 with nationwide awareness, free screening drives, and community education.

Join Our Campaign
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The Scale of the
Sickle Cell Challenge

Every statistic below represents a real person — a child, a parent, a family. Understanding the scale is the first step toward change.

SCDSG is fighting to change every one of these numbers.

Through screening, advocacy, education, and support — we work every day to push these statistics in the right direction.

Ghanaians with Sickle Cell Trait 25%

1 in 4 Ghanaians carries the HbAS trait

Newborns with SCD in Ghana 2%

~15,000 new SCD babies born yearly in Ghana

Under-5 Mortality Without Care 80%

Of SCD children die before age 5 without intervention

Mortality Reduction With Care 90%

Reduction in child mortality with newborn screening + penicillin

Sickle Cell Disease:
A Silent Crisis

Sickle cell disease is among the most prevalent inherited blood disorders on earth — yet it remains chronically underfunded and under-recognised. Sub-Saharan Africa carries more than 75% of the global burden.

Global Births Per Year
300,000+
babies are born with sickle cell disease every year — more than three quarters in sub-Saharan Africa.
100M+
people carry the sickle cell trait globally
50M+
people living with SCD worldwide
90%
of SCD deaths occur in low-resource settings
Top 5
cause of under-5 mortality in West Africa
Ghana Flag

Zoom in: Ghana

One of the highest SCD burdens in the world

2%of all newborns in Ghana are born with SCD
25–30%of Ghanaians carry the sickle cell trait (HbAS)
15,000+new SCD babies born in Ghana every year
50–80%of SCD children die before age 5 without timely care
Lownational coverage of universal newborn screening
Sources: WHO · CDC · Ghana Health Service · Sickle Cell Disease Coalition
Simple. Preventable. Treatable.

With universal newborn screening, prophylactic penicillin, and early education, child mortality from SCD can be reduced by over 90%. SCDSG is making this a reality in Ghana.

SCDSG team at World Sickle Cell Day event
SCDSG outreach photo 2
SCDSG outreach photo 3

About SCDSG

The Sickle Cell Disease Support Group of Ghana (SCDSG) is a registered NGO (Reg. No. CG01387022) dedicated to improving the quality of life for sickle cell patients and their families across Ghana.

Founded on the belief that no patient should suffer in silence, SCDSG bridges patients, healthcare providers, and policymakers — driving systemic change through advocacy, education, and community action.

  • Patient Advocacy

    Representing sickle cell patients at national and international policy forums.

  • Screening & Early Diagnosis

    Coming soon — free genotype screening drives and newborn screening awareness campaigns across Ghana.

  • Education & Awareness

    Delivering culturally sensitive SCD education to schools, churches, and communities.

  • Psychosocial Support

    Providing peer support, counselling referrals, and financial assistance to patients in need.

View Our Programs

Our Programs

From grassroots screening drives to national policy advocacy, SCDSG runs targeted programmes addressing every dimension of the sickle cell crisis in Ghana.

ScreeningScreening

Free Genotype Screening

Providing free haemoglobin electrophoresis and genotype testing to communities, schools, and healthcare facilities across Ghana.

Nationwide Ongoing
NewbornNewborn

Newborn Screening Advocacy

Advocating for universal newborn screening policy, training healthcare workers, and supporting families of newly diagnosed infants.

Hospitals Year-round
EducationEducation

School Awareness Campaign

🧬

Taking SCD education into secondary schools and universities — reaching the generation that will make informed reproductive choices.

Schools Termly
SupportSupport

Patient Support Network

Connecting SCD patients and caregivers to peer support groups, psychosocial care, and emergency financial assistance.

Community Monthly
🛡 MATERNAL CARE
SMERPMaternal

Maternal SCD Programme (SMERP)

🛡

Educating pregnant women with SCD on safe maternity care, risk management, and specialist referrals to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality.

Coming Soon — SMERP will be extended to additional regions across Ghana.
Clinics Ongoing
PolicyPolicy

Policy & Legislative Advocacy

Engaging the Ministry of Health, Parliament, and NHIA to push for SCD-inclusive policies, drug availability, and dedicated funding.

National Continuous
SCD Clinic AccessAccess

SCD Clinic Access at District Level

Advocating for the establishment and resourcing of dedicated SCD clinics at the district hospital level across Ghana, ensuring patients receive specialist care close to home regardless of location.

District Hospitals Ongoing
June 2026 · Active Campaign

30-Day SCD Education Campaign

A daily education series throughout June 2026 covering SCD genetics, the disease burden across Africa and Ghana, survival odds, treatment, and how to take action. One post every day in plain language — from genotypes to gene therapy.

The Full Spectrum of Sickle Cell Genetic Variants

Sickle Cell Disease is not a single condition — it is a group of inherited haemoglobin disorders caused by different combinations of gene mutations. Understanding the variants is critical for diagnosis, counselling, and treatment.

🔴
Most Severe
HbSS
Sickle Cell Anaemia

Two HbS genes — one from each parent. The most common and most severe form. Both parents must be HbAS carriers or have SCD themselves.

Inheritance: AS × AS or SS × any
🔵
Moderate
HbSC
Haemoglobin SC Disease

One HbS gene + one HbC gene. Generally milder than HbSS but still causes pain crises, eye complications (retinopathy), and bone issues. Often underdiagnosed.

Inheritance: AS × AC parents
🟣
Severe
HbS/β⁰-Thal
Sickle Beta-Zero Thalassaemia

One HbS gene + β⁰-thalassaemia mutation (no normal β-globin produced). Clinically similar to HbSS in severity. Requires full SCD management.

β⁰ = zero β-globin chain production
🟢
Mild–Moderate
HbS/β⁺-Thal
Sickle Beta-Plus Thalassaemia

One HbS gene + β⁺-thalassaemia (reduced but not absent normal β-globin). Usually milder than HbSS — severity depends on how much normal β-globin is produced.

β⁺ = reduced β-globin chain production
🌟
Mildest Form
HbS/HPFH
Sickle Cell + Hereditary Persistence of Foetal Haemoglobin

HbS gene + HPFH mutation that keeps foetal haemoglobin (HbF) elevated in adult life. High HbF levels (often 20–30%+) significantly suppress sickling. Most individuals are nearly asymptomatic. This is why Hydroxyurea works — it mimics HPFH by increasing HbF.

HbF = Foetal haemoglobin — natural sickling suppressor
🟡
Rare Variants
HbSD, HbSE, HbSO
Other Compound Heterozygotes

HbSD: HbS + HbD-Punjab. Moderate–severe. Seen in South Asian communities.
HbSE: HbS + HbE. Usually mild. Common in Southeast Asian-West African admixture.
HbSO-Arab: HbS + HbO-Arab. Can be as severe as HbSS.

All require haemoglobin electrophoresis for accurate diagnosis

Clinical Severity Spectrum

HbSS
Most severe
HbS/β⁰
Severe
HbSC · HbSD
Moderate
HbS/β⁺ · HbSE
Mild–moderate
HbS/HPFH
Mildest
The HPFH–Hydroxyurea Connection

Why Foetal Haemoglobin Protects Against Sickle Cell

In foetal life, haemoglobin F (HbF) — not HbA — carries oxygen. After birth, a genetic switch turns HbF off and HbA on. In people with HPFH, this switch doesn't fully occur — HbF persists at high levels into adult life, diluting and suppressing HbS sickling.

Hydroxyurea treats SCD by reactivating HbF production — essentially mimicking HPFH pharmacologically. The higher the HbF, the fewer sickle crises.

<1%
Normal adult HbF level
20–30%+
HbF in HbS/HPFH — protective
−50%
Pain crises with Hydroxyurea
HbF↑
Hydroxyurea's mechanism

Understanding Beta-Thalassaemia in Sickle Cell Context

Beta-Thalassaemia Trait (β-Thal Carrier)

A person with one normal β-globin gene and one β-thalassaemia mutation. Usually healthy, with mildly low blood count. Can be identified on haemoglobin electrophoresis. If their partner is HbAS, children are at risk of HbS/β-thalassaemia.

Why Thalassaemia Matters for Ghana

Beta-thalassaemia trait occurs in approximately 1–2% of Ghanaians. In communities where both HbAS and β-thalassaemia trait are present, HbS/β-thalassaemia cases occur — and are sometimes mistaken for or missed as HbSS. Full haemoglobin electrophoresis with HPLC is essential for accurate diagnosis.

Key diagnostic principle: All newborns and individuals with suspected SCD should receive haemoglobin electrophoresis or HPLC — not just a sickling test. The sickling test only detects HbS presence; it cannot distinguish HbSS from HbSC, HbS/β-thalassaemia, or HbS/HPFH.
Educational Content — Not Medical Advice

The genetic information on this page is provided for educational and awareness purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, genetic counselling, or a clinical diagnosis. Genotype results and treatment decisions must always be made in consultation with a qualified physician or certified genetic counsellor. If you or a family member may be affected by sickle cell disease, please contact your nearest teaching hospital or reach out to SCDSG for referral support.

View Our 30-Day Education Series Contact Us for Genetic Counselling

30-Day SCD Education Campaign

Click any flyer to read in full and share. Scroll to browse all 30 days — from genetics to gene therapy, in plain language.

2026 WSCD Theme: "Closing the Survival Gap: Equity in Sickle Cell Care"
View Full Series with Captions & Downloads

Executive Team

Our leadership brings together medical expertise, lived experience, and a shared commitment to ending the sickle cell burden in Ghana.

Francois Agbokame — President SCDSG

Francois Agbokame

President

Licensed Medical Laboratory Scientist, SCD parent, and leading advocate for sickle cell policy reform in Ghana. Steering Committee Member, ASCOG. Driving SCDSG's mission to end the sickle cell cycle across Ghana.

Brenda Ninson — Vice President SCDSG

Brenda Ninson

Vice President

SCD parent and passionate advocate for sickle cell patients and families, driving community engagement, patient education, and awareness programmes across Ghana.

Theophilus K.K. Nyamadi — Secretary SCDSG

Theophilus K.K. Nyamadi

Secretary

Emergency Nurse and parent to a child living with sickle cell disease. Responsible for SCDSG's governance, communications, and records — ensuring the smooth running of all meetings, correspondence, and official documentation.

Bernice Rakia Suley — Financial Secretary SCDSG

Bernice Rakia Suley

Financial Secretary

SCD parent and Financial Secretary overseeing SCDSG's financial records, dues collection, and accountability — ensuring transparent financial stewardship and operational sustainability for the organisation.

Grophin Owusi Dankwa — Organiser SCDSG

Grophin Owusi Dankwa

Organiser

SCD parent and the driving force behind SCDSG's outreach, events, and community programmes — mobilising members and executing every SCDSG event with precision and impact.

Victoria A.O. Twumasi-Nyarko — Ex-Officio SCDSG

Victoria A.O. Twumasi-Nyarko

Ex-Officio

SCD parent providing institutional memory, strategic guidance, and continuity to SCDSG's leadership as Ex-Officio member of the executive team.

YB
Founding Vision

Dr. Yvonne Nana Ama Brew

Physician & Medical Advisor

SCD parent and the visionary behind SCDSG. Paediatrician and Early Childhood Development Specialist at the Sickle Cell Clinic, Greater Accra Regional Hospital (GARH). Dr. Brew's personal and clinical experience with sickle cell disease was the founding inspiration for SCDSG, and her expertise continues to guide the organisation's medical direction.

Souhaila Acquah — PRO SCDSG

Souhaila Acquah

Public Relations Officer

SCD parent, Family Nurturer & Wellbeing Consultant passionate about helping caregivers, parents, couples, and families navigate life's transitions with clarity, resilience, and purpose. Manages SCDSG's public communications, media relations, and community outreach — amplifying the voice of sickle cell patients across Ghana.

News & Media

Our latest activities, media appearances, advocacy milestones, and awareness campaigns across Ghana.

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Featured Video

September is Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month

SCDSG's September 2024 nationwide media awareness campaign — filmed live on MX24 TV Lifestyle Daily as part of Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month. Featuring patient stories, expert medical insights from Dr Avril, and advocacy from President Francois Agbokame. Watch, share, and help spread awareness.

Watch on YouTube
Click to watch — SCD Awareness Month 2024
▶ Watch on YouTube
September is Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month
September 2024 — Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month Nationwide, Ghana
Watch on YouTube
September 2024 · Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month
MX24 TV Lifestyle Daily — "Raising Awareness for Sickle Cell: Hope Through Progress"
SCDSG on MX24 TV — Raising Awareness for Sickle Cell: Hope Through Progress September 21, 2024
Media Feature

SCDSG on MX24 TV — Raising Awareness for Sickle Cell: Hope Through Progress

SCDSG representatives appeared on MX24 TV's Lifestyle Daily programme to discuss sickle cell disease awareness, patient advocacy, and the work SCDSG is doing to improve lives across Ghana.

Learn More
SCDSG Parent Dinam educating the public on SCD parenting September 21, 2024
Patient Voice

SCDSG Parent Dinam Educates the Public on SCD Parenting — MX24 TV

SCDSG parent Dinam takes centre stage on MX24 Lifestyle Daily, educating the public on what it means to raise a child with sickle cell disease — the challenges, the hope, and the support that makes the difference.

Learn More
Francois Agbokame, President of SCDSG on MX24 TV September 21, 2024
Leadership

SCDSG President Francois Agbokame Speaks on MX24 TV

Francois Agbokame — President of SCDSG, Licensed Medical Laboratory Scientist, and SCD parent — speaks passionately on MX24 Lifestyle Daily about the urgent need for sickle cell awareness, screening, and policy reform in Ghana.

Meet the Team
Dr Avril on MX24 TV Lifestyle Daily September 21, 2024
Expert Voice

Dr Avril Shares Expert Insights on Sickle Cell Disease — MX24 TV

Dr Avril joined the SCDSG team on MX24 Lifestyle Daily, bringing clinical expertise and a powerful message on improving sickle cell care and outcomes across Ghana.

Learn More
Full SCDSG Panel on MX24 TV — Sickle Cell Disease Awareness September 21, 2024
Media Campaign

The Full SCDSG Panel on MX24 — Raising Awareness for Sickle Cell: Hope Through Progress

The complete SCDSG delegation on MX24 Lifestyle Daily — patients, parents, a medical professional, and advocates — united in one panel to amplify the message of hope, awareness, and action for sickle cell disease in Ghana.

About SCDSG
World Sickle Cell Day 2026 — Closing the Survival Gap: Equity in Sickle Cell Care June 19, 2026
Event

World Sickle Cell Day 2026: Know Your Genotype. Protect Your Legacy.

SCDSG marks World Sickle Cell Day 2026 with a nationwide genotype awareness campaign, community screenings, and educational outreaches across Ghana.

Read More
May 15, 2026
Grant

SCDSG Submits SMERP Grant Proposal to Sickle Gene International Foundation

SCDSG submitted the SMERP grant proposal to the Sickle Gene International Foundation Mini-Grant Program 2026, requesting USD 5,000 to expand maternal SCD education and referral services across Ghana.

Read More
April 2, 2024
Advocacy

SCDSG Presents Policy Brief to Ministry of Health on Newborn Screening

SCDSG presented a comprehensive policy brief to the Ministry of Health calling for universal newborn screening and dedicated SCD funding across all regions of Ghana.

Read More

30 Days of Sickle
Cell Truth

Our 30-day daily education series — from genetics and family inheritance to the disease burden in Africa and Ghana. Data-driven. Plain language. One post every day throughout June.

822
SCD babies/day
globally
41
SCD babies/day
in Ghana
30
Daily flyers
with full data
View the Full Series
Day 1
What Is Sickle Cell Disease?
🩸
Day 8
Global Burden: 300,000/Year
🌍
Day 11
Ghana: 41 SCD Babies Every Day
🇬🇭
Day 19
World Sickle Cell Day — June 19
🌐

What Our Community Says

Real stories from patients, families, and healthcare workers whose lives have been touched by SCDSG.

SCDSG gave me the courage to talk openly about my genotype. Their school outreach programme changed how my entire community thinks about sickle cell disease.

KM
Kofi Mensah
SCD Patient, Kumasi

As a nurse at GARH, I have seen firsthand how SCDSG's advocacy and the vaccine donations from their partners have dramatically reduced complications in our sickle cell patients under five.

EA
Nurse Esi Agyemang
Healthcare Professional, GARH

The peer support group SCDSG connected me to changed my life. I no longer feel alone in this journey. I have found a family of people who truly understand what living with sickle cell means.

AB
Ama Boateng
SCD Patient, Takoradi

Have a story to share? We would love to hear from you.

Share Your Story

Upcoming Events

Suggest an Event
28 Jun
Screening

Free Genotype Screening Drive — Greater Accra

Free haemoglobin electrophoresis screening for community members. Contact us on WhatsApp for venue details and registration.

Accra 8:00 AM – 2:00 PM
12 Jul
Education

SCD Patient & Family Education Workshop

Monthly education session for SCD patients and their caregivers at GARH. Open to all SCDSG members — contact us to register.

GARH, Accra 10:00 AM
19 Jul
Advocacy

SCDSG Quarterly Advocacy Meeting

Strategic review and advocacy planning session with SCDSG executive and steering committee members.

Accra 9:00 AM

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Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about sickle cell disease — from genetics and symptoms to treatment and support in Ghana.

Have a question not listed?

Our team is happy to help with any SCD-related question.

Ask Us

What is sickle cell disease (SCD)?

Sickle cell disease is an inherited blood disorder caused by a mutation in the HBB gene that produces haemoglobin. Instead of round, flexible red blood cells, patients produce sickle-shaped cells that are rigid and sticky. These abnormal cells can block blood flow, causing severe pain, organ damage, stroke, and life-threatening infections. It is one of the most common inherited blood disorders in the world, with Ghana carrying one of the highest burdens.

What does my genotype (AA, AS, SS, AC, SC) mean?

AA — Normal haemoglobin. No sickle cell disease or trait.

AS — Sickle cell trait carrier. Generally healthy but can pass the gene to children. If two AS partners have children, there is a 25% chance each child will have SS.

SS — Sickle cell disease (the most severe form). Two copies of the sickle gene.

AC — Haemoglobin C trait carrier. Generally healthy.

SC — Sickle cell disease (SC type). One sickle gene and one C gene. Usually milder than SS but still serious.

Can two AS partners have a healthy child?

Yes — but each pregnancy carries a 25% chance of the child having SS (sickle cell disease), a 50% chance of AS (carrier), and a 25% chance of AA (unaffected). This means that even two AS parents can have healthy children, but the risk is significant. SCDSG strongly encourages couples to know their genotypes before having children, and to seek genetic counselling to fully understand their options including prenatal diagnosis, IVF with genetic testing (PGT), and newborn screening.

What are the symptoms of sickle cell disease?

Common symptoms include: severe pain episodes (called vaso-occlusive crises), anaemia (low red blood cell count), fatigue, jaundice (yellowing of eyes and skin), frequent infections, delayed growth in children, vision problems, and stroke. Symptoms vary widely — some patients have frequent severe crises while others have milder disease. Early diagnosis and preventive care dramatically improve outcomes.

Is there a cure for sickle cell disease?

Yes — bone marrow (stem cell) transplantation can cure SCD, though it requires a matched donor and carries risks. More recently, two gene therapies — Casgevy (the first CRISPR-based medicine) and Lyfgenia — were approved in the USA and UK for SCD, offering potential cures. However, these treatments remain unavailable and unaffordable in Ghana. For most Ghanaian patients, management focuses on hydroxyurea, regular blood transfusions, prophylactic penicillin, folic acid, vaccinations, and pain management.

Why does my SCD child need the Pneumococcal vaccine?

Children with SCD have a damaged spleen, which is the body's main defence against certain bacteria — especially Streptococcus pneumoniae. Without a functioning spleen, SCD children are up to 600 times more likely to develop life-threatening pneumococcal infections. The Pneumococcal vaccine (Prevnar 13) is one of the most important preventive medicines for SCD children. Together with prophylactic penicillin, it dramatically reduces the risk of death from infection before age five. SCDSG, through our partnership with the Italian Women Association of Ghana, provides this vaccine free of charge to children who cannot afford it.

How can I get support from SCDSG?

SCDSG supports patients and families through peer support groups, patient education, emergency assistance referrals, and connecting you with specialist care. To access support: contact us via WhatsApp on +233 548 372 143, email administrator@scdsg.org, or fill in the contact form on this website. Membership is also open to all — join as an Individual Member (GHS 10/month) to access the full network of support and stay connected to our community.

Where can I get a free genotype test in Ghana?

SCDSG periodically organises free genotype screening drives across Ghana. Follow our social media pages and newsletter to get notified of upcoming screening events near you. You can also contact us on WhatsApp (+233 548 372 143) to find out when the next screening drive is in your area. For routine testing, most teaching hospitals and polyclinics in Ghana offer haemoglobin electrophoresis — ask at your nearest health facility.

Contact SCDSG

Whether you are a patient, caregiver, partner organisation, donor, or journalist — we would love to hear from you.

Become a member and be part of the movement to end sickle cell disease in Ghana.

📬 Important Notice — Email Issue Now Resolved

Our email administrator@scdsg.org recently experienced a technical delivery issue caused by a DNS configuration error which has now been corrected. The fix is currently propagating and will be fully effective within 4–8 hours. If you sent us an email recently and did not receive a response, please kindly resend your message as some emails sent during this period may not have been delivered. We sincerely apologise for any inconvenience caused and thank you for your patience.

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