Specialist training and medical research in developing countries of tropical Africa: a case for the establishment of postgraduate medical schools |
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Authors: | A. ADETUYIBI |
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Affiliation: | University College Hospital and University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria |
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Abstract: | Developing countries like developed ones need highly skilled medical personnel, referred to as 'specialists'. In the case of developing countries, the training of these specialists abroad is expensive to the sponsoring governments, imposes a lot of hardship on the doctors and, above all, the coursecontent of such training takes little or no cognizance of the environment in which these doctors would later practise. The developing countries also cannot afford the loss of years in valuable services which the training abroad entails. Attempts are now being made to train specialists wholly or partly at home, in some developing countries. The approach is still not much divorced from what obtains in Britain and North America, that is, one of being trained on the job, with the onus for self-education being placed on the prospective students. Such students in most developing countries of tropical Africa have little or no facilities for further education outside their places of work. It is proposed that purpose-designed postgraduate medical schools may provide a temporary solution to specialist training in developing countries of tropical Africa. Such schools would in addition provide highly skilled medical service as well as obviate the need and the expense for the setting up of government sponsored medical research and training institutes. |
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Keywords: | *Education, medical, graduate *Developing countries *Schools, medical Health facility planning International educational exchange Specialities, medical africa, western |
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