Editorial
That RSUST Medical School Initiative
Plans by the Rivers State Government
to establish a medical school in the
Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), Nkpolu, Port Harcourt, has continued to generate comments in some quarters.
Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi announced at the 26th convocation of the university recently that approval has been given for the authorities of the university to apply for a medical school for the institution. He also said funding would be made available as plans to relocate the university gathers momentum.
While there is no law against pessimism, the joy that greeted the announcement of the plan alone can safely represent the approval of the good people of Rivers State and residents alike. In the characteristic speed of the present administration under Governor Chibuike Amaechi, another legacy may well be underway.
The Tide welcomes the plan not only because, as the pioneer University of Science and Technology in Nigeria, RSUST deserves a college of medicine, the direct and indirect benefits it would bring for the state and its people can hardly be quantified.
For us, this is one plan that literarily makes RSUST complete as a science and technology institution. Although no field of study is without manifold benefits, but the medical school ought to have come before many of the courses the university has been offering over the years.
In addition to its potential of training and always making available high level manpower for the health sector, the specialized researches into the peculiar and emerging health challenges of people of the Niger Delta would be more than worth the trouble.
Every now and then, reports of health challenges arising from climate change, oil exploration and exploitation, gas emission, alteration of the lifestyle of the people and new environmental realities have tended to overwhelm the people. But the school will help in providing answers and remedies.
The Tide also shares the fears of some persons over the enormous requirements for a viable medical school, but knowing the infrastructure being planned for the permanent site of the university at Igwuruta and the result-oriented leadership of the university, Rivers people can be rest assured.
Indeed, the provision of space, structures, quality personnel, equipment and accreditation for the school will be no mean feat, but we have noted with joy how the Rivers State Government goes the extra mile to ensure that it finishes whatever it begins. This, no doubt, will be a confirmation of that character.
On the other hand, this is like the proverbial one stone that can be used to kill many birds. The burden it would remove from young people who would want to study medicine is huge. Being one of the most competitive courses, admission and cost of educating a medical professional can now be affordable for more persons.
In addition to reducing the burden of finding admission to read medicine and paying huge sums to send children overseas, this initiative will provide the opportunity for training and re-training of medical personnel in the state in particular and the region and nation in general. It will actually add to the nation’s stock of facilities for the health sector.
The school will also open job opportunities, broaden the level of interaction and exchange programmes with some of the best universities across the world with whom RSUST is already affiliated. Indeed, the benefits are endless.
That is why we commend the Rivers State Government for, as it were, tracing the foundation of the university with a view to strengthening the dreams of the founding fathers and positioning the state on strong ground for the future. We expect that work on this dream will begin even now.
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