Omaya

Maternal health Ghana

Maternal health needs continuity beyond the ward.

Omaya helps maternity teams in Ghana continue the care conversation after discharge through simple check-ins and clear escalation paths.

Overview

A Ghana-focused maternal health follow-up service.

Omaya is built around the gap between hospital discharge and everyday recovery at home. It gives mothers an easy channel for check-ins and gives hospitals a clearer view of who may need follow-up.

Designed around postpartum recovery and after-discharge continuity.

Works through calls and SMS to reduce access barriers.

Supports pilots with hospitals, clinics, and maternal health partners.

Continuity

Keep maternal health visible after discharge.

After birth, a mother's condition can change quickly. Omaya creates a lightweight care loop between the mother and the team that discharged her.

  • Schedule follow-up touchpoints after enrollment.
  • Capture changes in recovery, mood, feeding, medication, and warning signs.
  • Escalate concerning answers with the context teams need.

Access

Use channels mothers already have.

The service is built for phone calls and SMS, which helps teams reach mothers without assuming smartphone access or app adoption.

  • No app download required.
  • Supports mother-facing reminders and check-ins.
  • Keeps the clinical team in control of next steps.

FAQ

Questions about maternal health in Ghana.

How does Omaya fit into maternal health in Ghana?

Omaya focuses on the period after delivery, helping hospitals and maternity teams continue structured follow-up once a mother has gone home.

Who can use Omaya?

Omaya is currently positioned for focused pilots with hospitals, clinics, and maternal health partners in Ghana.

Is Omaya a medical advice service?

No. Omaya supports check-ins, reminders, and escalation. Medical advice and care decisions remain with qualified health professionals.

Start a conversation

Bring postpartum follow-up into your Ghana pilot.

Contact Omaya to request a hospital pilot, ask about early access, or discuss maternal health partnerships.