Omaya

Postpartum care Ghana

Postpartum care that continues after discharge.

Omaya helps mothers in Ghana receive structured postpartum check-ins by call and SMS, with hospital escalation when recovery answers need attention.

Overview

A practical follow-up layer for the weeks after birth.

Many postpartum concerns appear after a mother has already left the facility. Omaya gives hospitals a simple way to keep listening without asking every mother to install an app or travel back for every question.

Check-ins can ask about pain, bleeding, mood, sleep, feeding, medication, and warning signs.

Stable updates are recorded so teams can review recovery over time.

Concerning answers are surfaced with context for the hospital team.

For mothers

Support that meets her at home.

Omaya is designed for everyday phones, so postpartum support can continue through regular calls and SMS.

  • No smartphone or app download required.
  • Plain-language prompts about common recovery changes.
  • A clearer route back to care when something does not feel right.

For hospitals

A queue instead of a manual call list.

Maternity teams can focus attention on the few mothers whose answers suggest follow-up may be needed.

  • Enroll a mother before discharge.
  • Review check-in summaries and escalation context.
  • Keep clinical decisions with the hospital team.

FAQ

Questions about postpartum care in Ghana.

What is postpartum care in Ghana?

Postpartum care is the support a mother receives after birth, including recovery guidance, follow-up, and a pathway back to care when symptoms or concerns appear after discharge.

How does Omaya support postpartum care?

Omaya checks in with mothers by phone call and SMS, records recovery updates, and alerts the hospital team when answers suggest a mother may need attention.

Does Omaya replace hospital care?

No. Omaya is a follow-up and escalation service. Care decisions remain with qualified clinical teams.

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.