Ghana, Germany collaborate to
train more PhD Students in Health sciences, others
Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
Accra, June 16, Ghanadot - The
School of Public Health of the University of Ghana is
collaborating with the German Heidelberg University Hospital
and other institutions to train more PhD students in Health
Sciences, and Development Studies in Ghana and Africa as a
whole.
The collaboration focuses mainly on sponsoring and training
PhD students in the area of Health Research within the
School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences and
students in the field of Development Studies at the
Institute for Statistical Social and Economic Research (ISSER).
The overall goal of this collaboration is to contribute to
alleviating the age old problem of brain drain which
confronts Africa including Ghana and to bridge the
fragmentations of research capacities especially, in the
areas of Health Research and Development Studies in both the
sub-region and the European partner institutions.
To this end, the Ghana-Ghana Center for Development Studies
and Health Research has been inaugurated at the University
of Ghana, in Accra.
The Center is aimed at bringing academic institutions in the
Developing countries and their developed counterparts
together in partnership to build teaching and research
capacity through the training of students in Sub-Saharan
Africa.
In his welcome address, the Provost of the College of Health
Sciences, Professor Aaron Lawson welcomed the collaborations
as they have the potential of enhancing human resource
development of the beneficiary countries.
Presenting an overview of the program of Health Research,
Professor Ernest Aryeetey, the Executive Director of ISSER
stressed that the program was designed to address the
fragmentation in health research as well as developing
capacities and human resource problems in public health,
social sciences and health policy, clinical sciences and
laboratory-based sciences.
According to him, the program would enable PhD students to
have solid training in the core disciplines of the students’
PhD area by combining training in Ghana with training and
attachments to Northern PhD partner institution for
obtaining additional research skills or technical skills in
the students’ area of specialization.
The Program will also develop and teach study units aimed at
building leadership qualities in the students such as grant
writing, research ethics, fund raising, public speaking, and
presentation skills, he added.
The Executive Secretary of the National Council for Tertiary
Education, Mr. Paul Effah noted the establishment of the
center further met two vital criteria, namely, the promotion
of the international dimension of the University of Ghana
and the development of multi-disciplinary research with
enormous potential for addressing societal problems.
He however, regretted that the overall research performance
of African universities had not been very encouraging, to
the extent that only a few African universities feature
among world-class universities, defined predominantly by the
output of their research, the size of postgraduate student
population and the quality of graduates produced.
Among the reasons for the poor performance of scientific and
applied research are the lacks of scientific and
technological research infrastructure, inadequate funding
and low postgraduate student population in African
Universities, Mr. Effah mentioned.
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