Sir. Dr. Edward N. Gyader, Dean, UDS SMHS |
The first batch of medical doctors trained by the University
for Development Studies (UDS) School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS),
has been inducted into the Medical and Dental Council, as they begin their two
years housemanship program at the Tamale Teaching Hospital and some district
hospitals in the Northern Region of Ghana.
The 27 medical
doctors made up of 14 females and 13 males, took the Hippocratic Oath and
National Pledge which were administered by the Chairman of the Ghana Medical
and Dental Council and the Northern Regional Minister, Dr. Eric Asamoa and
Moses Bukari Mabengba respectively.
The occasion
marked the successful graduation of the medical doctors who spent nearly eight
years to study various courses both in theory and practicals/clinicals in the
school and at the Tamale Teaching Hospital (TTH) as well as some district
hospitals under the supervision of experienced specialists/consultants.
Indeed, this
would not had been a success had it not been one of Ghana’s and Africa’s most
revered and experienced surgeons, Sir Dr. Edward N. Gyader, who after
retirement from the Ghana Health Service following many decades of successful
medical practice in the Upper West Region, was called to duty again by the
management of the UDS to head the SMHS.
According to the
Catholic Knighted Personality, he was given the task to recall these graduates
who were sitting at home for a long time without any clear future and find them
a place to start their clinical training. This was because; the then medical
students were not given the usual opportunity by the Kwame Nkrumah University
of Science and Technology (KNUST) and University of Ghana Medical Schools to do
their clinical training due to serious constraints facing the two institutions,
Dr. Gyader added.
Dr. Gyader revealed
that a team from the Medical and Dental Council (MDC), who visited Tamale as
part of their routine inspection, insisted and encouraged the school to start
the clinical training at the TTH with all the anticipated challenges. Adding
that, the second problem he was expected to tackle was to draw up a
comprehensive curriculum to ensure that the school runs according to the format
laid down by the MDC. “Both assignments were duly executed and the students
were called back to begin a six month bridging programme in chemical pathology,
general pathology and neuroscience”, he confirmed.
The Dean of the
UDS/SMHS paid glowing tribute to the KNUST and University of Ghana Medical
Schools saying “We relied on them for part-time lecturers and external
examiners and they never let us down. I am confidently presenting these new
doctors to you knowing very well that with the external eyes provided by the
senior medical schools, there was enough confirmation that we were moving on
the right track.”
Sir Dr. Edward
Gyader reiterated his call on all well wishers that the school urgently
required a library with offices attached at the TTH to enable staff perform
better than they had done so far.
Prof. Haruna Yakubu, Vice-Chancellor, UDS |
The Vice-Chancellor
of the UDS Professor Haruna Yakubu disclosed that plans were far advanced to
provide library facilities at the TTH and stressed on the need for the Ghana
Education Trust Fund (GETFund) to assist the university complete some of the
projects earmarked for the TTH.
He also appealed
to the MDC and the Ministry of Health to post some specialists to the TTH so
that they could make their services available to the students.
Established in
1996, the UDS School of Medicine and Health Sciences like other medical schools
in Ghana had been using traditional curriculum to train her medical students. But
there had been a change over to the Problem Based Learning (PBL) methodology
since September 2007.
The rationale
for this change over to PBL lies in the mission statement of the University, "A School of Medicine and Health
Sciences Situated in Northern Ghana with a unique mandate to prepare health
professional and scientists, with the right beliefs and attitudes to work in
deprived rural communities, using the Problem Based Learning and the
Community-Based Extension Service approaches. A crop, who can, and are apt to
adapt to, initiate change and collaborate within interdisciplinary teams to
contribute significantly to humane and cost effective healthcare."
The PBL allows
for some interactive teaching and moulds a holistic medical student beginning
from year one. The programme involves the use of several district hospitals and
their consultants/specialists and exposes students as well as takes medical
care to the rural communities.
Thus, the 27 graduates
were awarded degrees in Human Biology and Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (M.B.,
ch. B). They are expected to get their license to practice as full medical
doctors after their two year housemanship.
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