Skip to main content
Ghana · For Doctors

How to Become a Telemedicine Doctor in Ghana

If you are a licensed doctor in Ghana, telemedicine lets you see patients online, set your own hours, and reach people who struggle to attend in person. This is a practical, honest guide to getting started — the regulator you answer to, the equipment you need, how to choose a platform, and how to begin on GeraClinic.

Last updated 2026-06-15 · 6 min read

Important: This guide is general information, not legal or regulatory advice. Telemedicine rules differ by country and change over time. Always confirm the current requirements with the Medical and Dental Council, Ghana (MDC) before practising remotely.

Who this guide is for

This guide is for doctors who already hold a medical qualification and registration in Ghana and want to add online consultations to how they practise — whether alongside a clinic role, to reach patients in remote areas, or to work more flexibly from home. It does not cover how to qualify as a doctor; it assumes you are already one.

1. Confirm your MDC registration is current

You can only practise telemedicine if you are already a licensed doctor. In Ghana, that means an active registration with the Medical and Dental Council, Ghana (MDC). Telemedicine is regulated medicine — the same professional, ethical, and legal duties apply online as in a clinic.

  • Check that your MDC registration and renewal is active and not lapsed.
  • Confirm any annual renewal or retention fee is paid.
  • Read your regulator’s current guidance on remote consultations and e-prescribing before you see a single patient.

Ghana has a structured registration and annual-renewal system through the MDC, and a growing appetite for digital health services. Verify your registration status before offering remote consultations.

2. Set up your equipment and a stable connection

Remote consulting needs surprisingly little hardware, but reliability matters more than anything fancy:

  • A laptop or desktop with a working webcam and microphone (a headset improves audio clarity).
  • A stable internet connection — aim for at least 2–5 Mbps upload for smooth video.
  • A quiet, private, well-lit room so the patient can see and hear you clearly.
  • A mobile phone as a backup connection in case your main link drops mid-consultation.

Patient confidentiality is part of your professional duty — make sure nobody else can see or overhear your consultations.

3. Choose a telemedicine platform

The platform handles the parts you should not have to build yourself: secure video, patient intake, scheduling, clinical notes, e-prescriptions, and payments. When choosing one, look for:

  • Encrypted video and a proper, auditable clinical record — not just a chat app.
  • Transparent fees so you know exactly what you keep from each consultation.
  • Identity and credential verification, which protects both you and your patients.
  • The ability to set your own hours, fees, and which conditions you accept.
  • Reliable, on-time payouts.

GeraClinic is one such platform: it verifies clinicians, provides the secure consultation tools, charges a transparent 15% platform fee (you keep 85%), and lets you set your own availability and pricing.

4. Get started on GeraClinic

Joining is free. The application is straightforward:

  1. Apply and create your profile — specialties, languages, and a short professional bio.
  2. Upload your MDC registration and credentials for verification.
  3. Set your availability, the consultation types you offer, and your fees.
  4. Once verified, you can start accepting online consultations.

You remain responsible for practising within the rules of your regulator. GeraClinic handles the technology, scheduling, and payments; the clinical judgement is yours.

Realistic expectations

We will not quote you an income figure. What you earn from telemedicine depends on things that are specific to you: your specialty, the fee you set, how many hours you make yourself available, patient demand in Ghana, and how established your online presence becomes. Anyone promising a guaranteed amount is guessing.

A few honest points to set expectations:

  • Demand builds gradually — early on you may have quiet periods while your profile gains visibility.
  • Telemedicine suits many conditions, but not all — anything needing a physical exam, a procedure, or emergency care must go in person.
  • You keep clinical responsibility for every consultation, exactly as you would in a clinic.
  • On GeraClinic you keep 85% of your consultation fee; the platform fee is 15%, with no signup or subscription cost.

The honest pitch is simple: telemedicine can give you flexibility and a wider patient reach with low overheads — but it is real medicine, and it rewards consistency and good clinical care, not shortcuts.

Start consulting online from Ghana

Free to apply. Set your own hours and fees. Keep 85% of every consultation. Verified clinicians only.

Related guides

GeraClinic connects verified clinicians with patients. This guide is informational only and is not legal, regulatory, or medical advice. Confirm current requirements with the Medical and Dental Council, Ghana before practising telemedicine in Ghana.