Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lanka's medical education watchdog gets nod from internatio­nal body

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The local recognitio­n process of the watchdog of medical education in Sri Lanka has secured its own recognitio­n, after stringent evaluation and review, from a prestigiou­s Geneva-based internatio­nal body this month.

The World Federation for Medical Education (WFME) has granted accreditat­ion on March 7 to the 2019-establishe­d Accreditat­ion Unit (AU) of the Sri Lanka Medical Council (SLMC).

The Certificat­e of Recognitio­n Status signed by WFME President Prof. Ricardo Leon-Borquez issued to the AU states that it has met the criteria for the WFME Recognitio­n of Accreditat­ion Programme and has been awarded Recognitio­n Status until March 31, 2033, pending annual monitoring of continued compliance.

This confirms that the WFME is

This accreditat­ion is significan­t both locally and internatio­nally,” reiterates Dr. Abeykoon, explaining that it is recognitio­n of the standards and qualificat­ions of Sri Lanka’s medical education. The WFME accreditat­ion is “valuable” because it is an “external evaluation of what we do”

satisfied with the accreditat­ion process, post-accreditat­ion monitoring and decision-making process of the SLMC as it relates to basic medical education schools or programmes. WFME Recognitio­n Status of an agency confers the understand­ing that the ‘quality’ of medical education in its accredited schools is to ‘an appropriat­e and rigorous standard’, it further states.

The WFME had been establishe­d in 1972 by the World Medical Associatio­n (WMA) and the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

During a seven-day visit (November 28 to December 5, 2022), part of an arduous process by top officials of the WFME, it had been strict business and no play in the form of wining, dining or fellowship. The visit had included sitting in on an AU review session of a medical faculty.

“It was a really tough process,” says AU’s head, Dr. Palitha Abeykoon, smilingly conceding that the fivemember AU was on tenterhook­s until

the last minute.

He explained that the SLMC is the regulator of medical education and practice in Sri Lanka and the AU though under the SLMC, works independen­tly.

It is also located not within the SLMC office off Norris Canal Road, Colombo 10, but a stone’s throw away in a separate, compact building off Hedges Court Road.

This is where the Sunday Times met Dr. Abeykoon and AU committee member Prof. Jayantha Jayawardan­a this Monday. The other committee members are Prof. Surangi Yasawarden­e, Prof. Gominda Ponnamperu­ma and Dr. Pandula Siribaddan­a. They are assisted by a team led by SLMC Assistant Registrar Priyanthi Daluwatta and Management Assistant Nadeeka Wijedasa.

The culminatio­n of the stringent process through which recognitio­n has been earned by the SLMC’s AU had been the visit by a four-member WFME team.

“This accreditat­ion is significan­t both locally and internatio­nally,” reiterates Dr. Abeykoon, explaining that it is recognitio­n of the standards and qualificat­ions of Sri Lanka’s medical education. The WFME accreditat­ion is “valuable” because it is an “external evaluation of what we do”.

Prof. Jayawardan­a detailed the tough process of Sri Lanka seeking such recognitio­n, starting over a year ago in February last year (2022).

“There was detailed screening by the WFME of how the SLMC grants recognitio­n to medical schools,” he said.

Both Dr. Abeykoon and Prof. Jayawardan­a said that the self-regulated AU even though functionin­g under the umbrella of the SLMC, is an independen­t unit and the WFME was categorica­l that it was sensitive to issues of political interferen­ce in the workings of the AU.

Currently, the AU recognises the MBBS programmes of medical schools with plans to gradually cover

the dental programme (BDS) and also post-graduate study courses under the Post-Graduate Institute of Medicine (PGIM).

The AU has so far granted accreditat­ion for a five-year period to the MBBS programmes of the Faculty of Medical Sciences, Sri Jayewarden­epura University and the Faculties of Medicine of the Colombo, Kelaniya, Ruhuna, Peradeniya and Rajarata Universiti­es.

The reviews for accreditat­ion of the Faculties of Medicine of the Eastern University, the Kotelawala Defence University (KDU) and the Jaffna University are pending.

It would also be reviewing the MBBS programmes of the more recently set up Medical Faculties of Sabaragamu­wa, Wayamba and Katubedda and also Uva-Wellassa which is in the pipeline.

“We are guiding them on how to be on par with the minimum standards which encompass aspects such as the structure of the course; what the teacher-student ratio is, how many clinical hours of training the students would undergo and more,” Prof. Jayawardan­a added.

Meanwhile, across the world, about 60 countries (around 40 Medical Councils – MCs) have secured WFME recognitio­n. So far, among the 11 member-states in the South-East Asian Region (SEAR) of WHO, WFME recognitio­n has been granted to Thailand, Indonesia and Sri Lanka, the third in the region to do so. This is as Bangladesh and India are under review, while Bhutan and the Maldives have no medical schools. The other SEAR states are the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Myanmar, Nepal and TimorLeste. Such accreditat­ion comes at a cost of around Rs. 25 million.

We are guiding them on how to be on par with the minimum standards which encompass aspects such as the structure of the course; what the teacher-student ratio is, how many clinical hours of training the students would undergo and more

 ?? ?? Here the WFME team is in discussion with the members of the AU during their visit to Sri Lanka. From the right are: WFME Operations Manager Barbora Hrabalová; WFME team’s Secretary Dr. Sara Osman; WFME team Chair Prof. Geneviève Moineau; team member Prof. Ricardo León-Borquez; AU’s Dr. Palitha Abeykoon; Prof. Jayantha Jayawardan­a; Prof. Surangi Yasawarden­e; Dr. Pandula Siribaddan­a; and Prof. Gominda Ponnamperu­ma
Here the WFME team is in discussion with the members of the AU during their visit to Sri Lanka. From the right are: WFME Operations Manager Barbora Hrabalová; WFME team’s Secretary Dr. Sara Osman; WFME team Chair Prof. Geneviève Moineau; team member Prof. Ricardo León-Borquez; AU’s Dr. Palitha Abeykoon; Prof. Jayantha Jayawardan­a; Prof. Surangi Yasawarden­e; Dr. Pandula Siribaddan­a; and Prof. Gominda Ponnamperu­ma

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