A new Seventh-day Adventist School of Medicine in Nigeria is the denomination’s first in Africa.
The Benjamin S. Carson Sr. School of Medicine and Babcock University
Teaching Hospital was inaugurated this month during commencement
services at church-run Babcock University in Lagos, Nigeria.
Adventist Education and Health Ministries officials say the new school
signals a growing commitment by Africans to build self-sufficiency in
addressing the sweeping public health challenges the continent faces.
According to United Nations reports, Sub-Saharan Africa alone is home
to at least two-thirds of the 33 million adults and children worldwide
living with HIV/AIDS, yet the region accounts for just 1 percent of
global health spending and 2 percent of the global healthcare workforce.
The launch of a medical school in Nigeria, while not an immediate fix,
is “a clear start” toward a “healthcare delivery system yet unrivaled in
Africa,” said Babcock University President James Makinde.
The School of Medicine operates out of Babcock University College of
Health and Medical Sciences, which also includes schools of Nursing and
Public Health. Administrators say schools of Pharmacy and Dentistry are
on the horizon. The school is accredited to grant a Bachelor of
Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) degree, the first professional
degree a medical student can earn studying at a university that follows
the British model of post-secondary education.
The 37 students currently enrolled in the MBBS program have been
studying since January, when Babcock University administrators first
requested a public inauguration for the fledgling medical school. But at
the time, the official launch was prevented by yet unmet accreditation
requirements and unrest after the Nigerian government lifted a gas
subsidy, said Lisa Beardsley-Hardy, Education director for the Adventist
world church.
“We needed to verify that [accrediting] conditions had been met. They
have now been substantially met,” Beardsley-Hardy said. The
infrastructure for the medical school is now nearly complete, too, she
added.
Adventist Education officials worked closely with the world church’s
Health Ministries to set benchmarks for the medical school.
Health Ministries director Allan Handysides, who has supported medical
mission work in Africa for decades, echoed Beardsley-Hardy’s
endorsement.
“I have seldom seen such remarkable progress in such short time at any
of our other institutions. The team at Babcock has taken the suggestions
and guidance given seriously, and the result is outstanding,”
Handysides said.
“We believe that this fledgling institution has the potential to grow
and reach new heights and standards of excellence,” he added. “We are
grateful to God for his blessings and also to the energy, vision and
tenacity of the team at Babcock and the administration of the [church’s]
West-Central African Division.”
World renowned pediatric neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson, after whom the
medical school is named, spoke at the launch, noting that a top-notch
medical school in Africa positions the continent as a player in finding
solutions for the region’s challenges.
“I am extremely pleased to have my name associated with Babcock
University because of its visionary leadership and the great potential
that it has to produce a variety of excellent healthcare professionals
that will have a positive impact not only on Nigeria, but on the whole
continent of Africa and potentially the entire world,” Carson later told
ANN.
Carson, an Adventist who has used the public spotlight to share the
church’s message of hope and healing, urged Babcock medical students to
look for opportunities for mission-minded outreach.
“Babcock University has a reputation for excellence and in fact is
considered by many to be the number one private university in Nigeria,”
Carson said. “It is well positioned to bring medical care followed by
spiritual care to the masses in the same way that Jesus did.”
The Benjamin S. Carson Sr. School of Medicine is the Adventist Church’s
fourth medical school worldwide, and its second English-language
medical school. The church operates medical schools in Montemorelos,
Mexico; Entre Rios, Argentina; and its flagship school in Loma Linda,
California, United States. Adventist universities in Peru and the
Philippines are also building medical programs.
Students at Babcock can choose from among three tracks: one serves
Nigeria, one the entire West African region and another, the “global
track,” includes rotations in the United Kingdom and the U.S.
In recent years, Africa has struggled to keep trained professionals in
the region after graduation. The UN Development Program estimates that
some 20,000 skilled Africans emigrate every year, often choosing the
economic opportunities and political stability of Western Europe and
North America. The loss of medical doctors has been “the most striking,”
according to agency reports.
“I hope that the global track does not become the primary track, so
that this just becomes another means of exodus outside the country,”
Beardsley-Hardy said.
Adventist education officials say clear paths for medical service in the region will guard against further brain drain.
“We want to train not just doctors, but medical missionaries who will
go to all parts of the sub-region and give healthcare from the Biblical
perspective,” said Chiemela Ikonne, Education director for
denomination’s West-Central Africa Division.
“The healing of the body can never be complete without the healing of
the mind. This method of training brings the dimension that is lacking
in the secular preparation of medical doctors,” Ikonne said.
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