New Era

Nangombe explains decision to end health training

- Albertina Nakale

Following a students’ union’s request to reopen national health training centres, executive director in the ministry of health Ben Nangombe explained why government decided to cease training and focus on promoting and protecting the health of Namibians.

The Students’ Union of Namibia (SUN) last week wrote a letter to health minister Dr Kalumbi Shangula, requesting that ministry to reopen the centres countrywid­e. Shangula announced the suspension of the training centres in 2019 during President Hage Geingob’s townhall meeting at Ongwediva.

These training centres are registered under the ministry of health, with campuses in Windhoek and at the Oshakati, Keetmansho­op, Otjiwarong­o, Rundu and Onandjokwe hospitals.

The centres offered enrolled nursing and midwifery (the upgrading of nursing assistants); medical rehabilita­tion work; pharmacist’s assistance; radiograph­ic assistance; and laboratory techniques.

SUN acting secretary general Oscar Richo Shikongo said although there was a shortage of health profession­als at the time and calls by the Namibian Nurses Union (Nanu) for government to reconsider its decision to shut down the centres and instead reduce the number of students enrolled, the government went ahead to shut down all these centres without hesitation.

“Honourable minister, in 2019 the ministry of health indefinite­ly suspended the training of nurses at all health training centres countrywid­e with the lame excuse of a lack of funds.

“These unpreceden­ted times of the devastatin­g and deadly Covid-19 pandemic should help us to reflect and correct ourselves on the bad decisions and misplaced priorities

the ministry has been overwhelme­d with, whilst overlookin­g critical aspects of adequate staff provision and enhancing and decentrali­sing better healthcare services and personnel to the masses,” Shikongo charged.

SUN argued that the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed Namibia’s limping health system, with reported shortages of healthcare workers that has left nurses overworked and at huge risk of infection due to the unbalanced ratio of treating those seeking assistance.

Nangombe said the training network of the health ministry is still operationa­l, but only focuses on continuous education (inservice training).

He explained that shortly after Independen­ce and in 1992 exactly, the ministry establishe­d a centre in Windhoek with the mandate to provide pre-service training for various sub-profession­al cadres of the ministry.

From 1996, regional health training centres were then establishe­d at Windhoek, Keetmansho­op, Rundu, Oshakati, Otjiwarong­o and Onandjokwe, and these constitute­d the training network of the ministry. The mandate of the training network was to offer pre-service training, continuous education and informatio­n (library) services.

Courses which the training network offered under pre-service training were enrolled nursing or midwifery; pharmacist’s assistance; environmen­tal health assistance; radiograph­y assistance; medical rehabilita­tion; and laboratory techniques. “The last two courses were discontinu­ed in 2004. The decision by the health ministry to train these cadres was due to the absence of local training institutio­ns that could offer those courses, coupled with staff shortages at the time,” Nangombe explained.

In 2012, Cabinet approved and directed the ministry to train medical and allied health profession­als at foreign academic institutio­ns, as well as to train registered nurses at diploma level at the existing training network. The latter was to be executed through a project with a defined period of six years, after which it was expected that 1 080 registered nurses would have been trained.

Nangombe said it should be pointed out that until 2012, the University of Namibia was the only local academic institutio­n that was offering a training programme for registered nurses. However, from 2013, new local training institutio­ns came on board to train both registered and enrolled nurses.

“To date, three local universiti­es offer training for registered nurses, while training for enrolled nurses is offered at four academic institutio­ns,” he added.

 ?? Photo: Bernard Nyambe ?? No training… The National Health Training Centre in Windhoek.
Photo: Bernard Nyambe No training… The National Health Training Centre in Windhoek.

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