Medical education: Should undergraduate medicine be post-baccalaureate?

IF 0.8 Q3 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Nigerian Postgraduate Medical Journal Pub Date : 2010-04-01 DOI:10.4314/NMJ.V51I2.59873
S. Nwosu
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In 1960 the first 13 medical students fully trained in Nigeria to internationally accepted standard graduated from the then University College Ibadan, earning the Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) London degree. Since then thousands of doctors trained to international standard have been produced from different medical schools in Nigeria. The Medical & Dental Council of Nigeria has now registered about 50, 000 doctors most of whom trained locally in Nigerian universities. The doctors were admitted into the universities with SSCE or its equivalent as the minimum entry requirement. These doctors have acquitted themselves by admirably working hard to in various capacities, including research, teaching and clinical services, to address and solve the health needs of Nigerians and beyond. Recently the National Universities Commission (NUC) proposed and may soon implement a policy that would make the university first degree the minimum qualification for entry into medical schools in Nigeria. The new policy advocates a 4 year medical undergraduate curriculum. However this would in effect translate to a minimum of 9 years post-secondary school to produce a medical doctor. Given the perennial instability in the health and educational sectors in Nigeria as well as the difficulties in obtaining placement for internship, it may practically take up to 15 years post-secondary school to fully register a doctor. Therefore the new NUC policy will have the effect of producing aging young doctors which will in turn put the lives of Nigerians at increased risk. Whatever be the flaw with the current 5 or 6 year straight MBBS programme is not due to the fact that SSCE or its equivalent is the minimum entry qualification. A minimum medical school entry qualification that has served Nigeria well for more than 50 years should not be jettisoned without convincing scientific evidence that it is detrimental to Nigeria's health policy and medical education process.
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医学教育:本科医学应该是后学士学位吗?
1960年,首批13名在尼日利亚接受国际公认标准全面培训的医科学生从当时的伊巴丹大学学院毕业,获得医学学士学位和伦敦外科学士学位。从那时起,尼日利亚各医学院培养了数千名经过国际标准培训的医生。尼日利亚医学和牙科委员会目前已注册了大约5万名医生,其中大多数在尼日利亚大学接受过当地培训。这些医生以SSCE或同等学历作为最低入学要求进入大学。这些医生在研究、教学和临床服务等各种能力上令人钦佩地努力工作,以处理和解决尼日利亚人和其他人的卫生需求,从而证明了自己。最近,全国大学委员会(NUC)提出并可能很快实施一项政策,将大学第一学位作为进入尼日利亚医学院的最低资格。新政策提倡4年制医学本科课程。然而,这实际上意味着至少要接受9年的中学后教育才能成为一名医生。鉴于尼日利亚卫生和教育部门的长期不稳定以及获得实习机会的困难,中学毕业后可能需要长达15年的时间才能完全注册成为一名医生。因此,新的NUC政策将产生产生衰老的年轻医生的影响,这反过来又会使尼日利亚人的生命面临更大的风险。无论目前5年或6年全日制MBBS课程的缺陷是什么,都不是因为SSCE或同等学历是最低入学资格。50多年来为尼日利亚提供良好服务的最低医学院入学资格不应被抛弃,除非有令人信服的科学证据表明它不利于尼日利亚的卫生政策和医学教育进程。
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来源期刊
Nigerian Postgraduate Medical Journal
Nigerian Postgraduate Medical Journal MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
52
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