Saturday, March 14, 2026
Ghana Fact
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • How we work
    • Submit a claim to check
    • Partners
    • Our Team
    • Funding
    • Principles
    • Corrections
    • Privacy Policy
    • Press Releases
  • Contact
  • Home
    • Latest
    • Trending
  • Governance
  • DisinfoLab
    • Narrative Reports
    • Scams & Spam
  • Politics
    • Election 2020
    • Election 2024
  • Economy
  • Health
    • COVID-19
  • Environment
  • AI & Deepfakes
No Result
View All Result
Ghana Fact
  • Home
    • Latest
    • Trending
  • Governance
  • DisinfoLab
    • Narrative Reports
    • Scams & Spam
  • Politics
    • Election 2020
    • Election 2024
  • Economy
  • Health
    • COVID-19
  • Environment
  • AI & Deepfakes
No Result
View All Result
Ghana Fact
No Result
View All Result
Home General News

Hoax! Ghana’s Health Minister has not announced mandatory DNA testing for newborns

Aside from the minister's post labelling the claim as "fake news," no credible news websites have published any stories about a government of Ghana policy to conduct mandatory DNA tests for newborns. 

Rahman ShabanbyRahman Shaban
June 24, 2025
in General News
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
Hoax! Ghana's Health Minister has not announced mandatory DNA testing for newborns
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on ThreadsWhatsApp

Claim: Health minister announces mandatory DNA testing in Ghana from 2026

Source: Social media  

Verdict: Hoax!

Researched by Gifty Danso 

Social media posts suggesting that Ghana’s Minister of Health, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, has announced mandatory DNA testing in hospitals for newborns beginning January 1, 2026, were widely shared online in mid-June 2025.

The claims circulating on platforms such as X, Facebook, and TikTok come with similar captions attached to a photo of the minister. (here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here). 

Hoax! Ghana's Health Minister has not announced mandatory DNA testing for newborns
Fig. 1 – Screenshot of the claim on Facebook
Hoax! Ghana's Health Minister has not announced mandatory DNA testing for newborns
Fig. 2 – Another screenshot of claim on Facebook
Hoax! Ghana's Health Minister has not announced mandatory DNA testing for newborns
Fig. 3 – Screenshot of the claim on X

This fact-check will verify the authenticity of the claim

RelatedNews

False! NPP MP wrongly claims NDC chairman Asiedu Nketiah is on 9th Parliamentary Service Board 

FACT-CHECK: Asiedu Nketiah’s claim that 500,000 people applied to join the Police Service is False

PROMISE METER: Fact-checking all 25 promises in President John Mahama’s 120-day social contract

FACT-CHECK: President Mahama’s claim that 950,000 people escaped multidimensional poverty in Q1 – Q3 of 2025 is False

The ‘1 million jobs in 2025’ data attributed to GSS: Unpacking Ayariga, President Mahama’s false claim

The ‘1 million jobs in 2025’ data attributed to GSS: Unpacking Ayariga, President Mahama’s false claim

Ivory Coast now paying lower cocoa producer price compared to Ghana

Ivory Coast now paying lower cocoa producer price compared to Ghana

Fact-check

GhanaFact found that the posts claiming the minister had made the DNA testing announcement, were shared between June 13 and 20, 2025 (here, here, and here). 

Has the Health Ministry announced plans to make DNA tests mandatory in Ghana from 2026?

The Minister of Health, on June 13, 2025, said the claim was false. In a post on X, he wrote: “Fake news. Please disregard” on a screenshot of one of the claims that had “Fake” inscription embossed on it. 

Hoax! Ghana's Health Minister has not announced mandatory DNA testing for newborns
Fig. 4 – Screenshot of the minister’s response to the claim

Additionally, no credible news websites have published any stories about a government of Ghana policy to conduct mandatory DNA tests for newborns. 

Through keyword search function, GhanaFact also found posts on Facebook between May 20, 2025 and May 21, 2025, from US-based accounts that posted about mandatory DNA starting January 2026. (find here, here, and here)

A cross-Africa hoax

GhanaFact, in the course of our investigation, identified that similar DNA testing claims have previously gone viral in a number of African countries including Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya. 

Like Ghana, the June 2025 posts about mandatory “DNA tests” were also shared by Nigerian accounts on Facebook and TikTok between June 6 and 17, 2025 (find here, here and here). 

Disinformation about “DNA tests” is not recent in that country. In 2022, Africa Check, an independent fact-checking organisation, debunked claims in Nigeria and South Africa about a government plan for “free DNA tests.” 

Another report in 2024 debunked claims in Nigeria that the Federal Government had mandated DNA tests for newborns nationwide (find here). 

Almost a decade ago, the South African government also debunked similar claims after an online article claimed authorities had intended to introduce compulsory DNA testing requirements for registration of new births. 

GhanaFact found the same disinformation in Kenya in 2024, when Africa Check debunked viral claims about nationwide mandatory DNA tests for newborns (here).

What is DNA?

DNA, a short form for DeoxyriboNucleic Acid, is a molecule that carries genetic information in humans and almost all living organisms. 

DNA tests or genetic tests are conducted for several reasons, including determining whether an individual has a genetic condition or may develop one in the future and other times to establish paternity. 

While investigating this claim, GhanaFact found that there had been calls for mandatory DNA testing in Namibia in May 2025. However, this was rejected by the country’s Justice Ministry, whose spokesperson indicated that the government has no plans to make DNA testing mandatory (find here). 

Most recently in the UK, the government’s Health Secretary announced that every baby will have their DNA tested under a new 10-year plan for illness prevention. 

Verdict

Therefore, the claim that DNA testing will be mandatory for newborns in Ghana is a Hoax! 

ShareTweetShareSend

Related Posts

Controversy around Google’s AI tools for local languages initiative: Here’s all you need to know

Controversy around Google’s AI tools for local languages initiative: Here’s all you need to know

CAF sanctions Senegal and Morocco over 2025 AFCON final chaos: Here are the full facts

CAF sanctions Senegal and Morocco over 2025 AFCON final chaos: Here are the full facts

Marburg outbreak in Ethiopia: MoH, GHS activate public health emergency response structures

Marburg outbreak in Ethiopia: MoH, GHS activate public health emergency response structures

2025 Paris Peace Forum: Ablakwa calls for global action against health misinformation

2025 Paris Peace Forum: Ablakwa calls for global action against health misinformation

‘We must work to win the global war against mis, disinformation’ – President Mahama at 2025 Paris Peace Forum

‘We must work to win the global war against mis, disinformation’ – President Mahama at 2025 Paris Peace Forum

2025 UNESCO MIL Week celebration: GhanaFact engages 2 schools on online safety

2025 UNESCO MIL Week celebration: GhanaFact engages 2 schools on online safety

Load More

Most Recent

False! NPP MP wrongly claims NDC chairman Asiedu Nketiah is on 9th Parliamentary Service Board 

FACT-CHECK: Asiedu Nketiah’s claim that 500,000 people applied to join the Police Service is False

PROMISE METER: Fact-checking all 25 promises in President John Mahama’s 120-day social contract

FACT-CHECK: President Mahama’s claim that 950,000 people escaped multidimensional poverty in Q1 – Q3 of 2025 is False

The ‘1 million jobs in 2025’ data attributed to GSS: Unpacking Ayariga, President Mahama’s false claim

The ‘1 million jobs in 2025’ data attributed to GSS: Unpacking Ayariga, President Mahama’s false claim

Ivory Coast now paying lower cocoa producer price compared to Ghana

Ivory Coast now paying lower cocoa producer price compared to Ghana

Load More

Most Popular

False! NPP MP wrongly claims NDC chairman Asiedu Nketiah is on 9th Parliamentary Service Board 

FACT-CHECK: Asiedu Nketiah’s claim that 500,000 people applied to join the Police Service is False

No US military base in Ghana, claims President Mahama has closed bases is False!

No US military base in Ghana, claims President Mahama has closed bases is False!

Ivory Coast now paying lower cocoa producer price compared to Ghana

Ivory Coast now paying lower cocoa producer price compared to Ghana

False! Burkina Faso has NOT backed Iran in war with Israel, US; circulating video is a deepfake 

False! Burkina Faso has NOT backed Iran in war with Israel, US; circulating video is a deepfake 

Load More
Ghana Facts - factscheck

GhanaFact is a project by FactSpace West Africa aimed at curbing the spread of disinformation on traditional and social media.

Follow Us

Browse Articles

  • AI & Deepfakes
  • DisinfoLab
    • Narrative Reports
    • Scams & Spam
  • Economy
  • Election 2020
  • Election 2024
  • Environment
  • General News
  • Governance
  • Health
    • COVID-19
  • Other Checks
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Promise Meter

Contact

Address: P. O. Box AB 521, Abeka-Lapaz, Accra

WhatsApp: +233 244 49 9971

Email: info@ghanafact.com

Memberships

Memberships
  • Submit a claim to verify
  • Contact
  • Corrections
  • Team
  • About
  • Funding
  • How we work
  • Partners
  • Principles
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Ghana Fact - All rights reserved - Web development by EnspireFX Websites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
    • Latest
    • Trending
  • Governance
  • DisinfoLab
    • Narrative Reports
    • Scams & Spam
  • Politics
    • Election 2020
    • Election 2024
  • Economy
  • Health
    • COVID-19
  • Environment
  • AI & Deepfakes

© 2025 Ghana Fact - All rights reserved - Web development by EnspireFX Websites.