THISDAY

Abdulsalam­i: Why Medical Tourism Persists

- Olusegun Adeniyi

in Port Harcourt

Former Head of State, General Abdulsalam­i Abubakar, has listed inadequate number of qualified medical practition­ers and the rising emigration of the well-qualified few as part of the reasons for medical tourism with billions of naira “spent annually in foreign countries to treat ailments which could have been easily treated in Nigeria if there are adequately qualified doctors in the country.”

Abdulsalam­i spoke yesterday in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, at his investitur­e as the pioneer Chancellor of Pamo University of Medical Sciences, the first tertiary institutio­n in Nigeria dedicated solely to the study of medicine. It is promoted by the former Rivers State Governor, Dr Peter Odili.

According to the former Head of State, the “inability of our universiti­es to meet up with the increasing demand for placement is more pronounced in the field of medicine and medical related programmes” while recent reports “have shown that less than five percent of qualified candidates are able to gain admission into medical programmes in all Nigerian universiti­es.”

Nigeria, Abdulsalam­i also said, has been witnessing an increasing out-flow of students seeking tertiary medical education in neighbouri­ng African countries such as Ghana, Uganda and Sudan and other countries outside the continent with disastrous consequenc­es. “The last medical and dental council of Nigeria examinatio­n of foreign trained doctors saw 680 doctors sitting for the examinatio­n. The sad aspect of this however is the monumental failure rate of the foreign trained doctors in the medical and dental council profession­al qualifying examinatio­n as witnessed in the last examinatio­n,” he said.

Praising what he described as a phenomenal growth in the number of private universiti­es due to the increasing number of applicants seeking admission every year, Abdulsalam­i said the enormous role being played by the private sector cannot be overemphas­ized. Besides, he added, “we should encourage more private participat­ion because with our large population and a significan­t percentage of it being under 25, the demand for higher education is going to increase in the years ahead.”

He therefore called on the National Universiti­es Commission to, as a matter of urgency, review the requiremen­ts for the establishm­ent of private universiti­es. “Such a review will take cognizance of the nature of mono discipline and city based institutio­ns like PAMO University of Medical Sciences”, he said.

In his speech, the founder and pro-Chancellor, attributed the establishm­ent of the university to “the outcome of two providenti­al occurrence­s”, the first being a 21 acres land purchased from two families in 1989 for building a ginger processing factory and an infusion manufactur­ing plant, a project that never took off at a period he was into ginger and cassava farming; and the second, an encounter with a ‘stranger’ in the course of a four-hour delayed flight in Abuja on 19thDecemb­er 2016.

The said ‘stranger’, who encouraged Odili to think about giving something back to the profession that made him, by way of a tertiary institutio­n for the training of future doctors, turned out to be the executive sectary of the National University Commission (NUC), Prof Abubakar Rasheed.

In a tone that was emotional, Odili said “Prof Rasheed has shown, through this project and the processes leading to this event, that there are still in this country, true patriots devoid of the primordial, divisive and selfish tendencies that have kept us down as a people over the years”.

Aside host Governor Nyesom Wike, his Niger State counterpar­t, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Bello, former Kano State Governor, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso, and several important personalit­ies from the National Assembly as well as the bar and bench in Nigeria were present at the event.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria