Categories: Lifestyle

Why I Fear Some of Africa’s New Medical Graduates

Girl visiting doctor

Early this year as I was returning from Makurdi to Gboko in Nigeria, I met a new medical and anatomy graduate undergoing her one year National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) experience in a certain rural town in Benue State. Without a doubt, I admired the lady’s personality and her readiness to give those in the vehicle some health tips. She was a very cheerful lady, but in the course of discussions, she made some disturbing statements that got me thinking.

SEE ALSO: POEM: MY BEST FIRST YEAR

The first was that pregnant and nursing Mothers with HIV cannot breastfeed their babies. Second, she said that mosquitoes do not transfer HIV, because they die immediately after they suck the blood of any HIV-infected person. Due to her misinformation, the other passengers in the vehicle had to correct her.

And while she took the correction kindly, I could not comprehend the level of this new medical and anatomy graduate’s ignorance on common medical issues, issues that ordinary persons are knowledgeable about.

This is not a good sign at all, because it technically means that her long years of training in medical school, were not effective. Since then, I have not stopped thinking about the disaster such persons will likely cause for the medical profession as well as the dangers patients are to face in their hands.

I am not a medical practitioner, but one thing I am certain of is that the long years adopted by medical colleges in the training of intended medical professionals was not put in place for the sake of fulfilling a routine purpose.

Instead, it is supposed to be a process of intensive training.

It is within those years that the common health knowledge known previously by the doctors-in-training are affirmed, purified, or expunged. It is within these years, that they are taught about the various quick, slow, and steady measures of countering hazards affecting human health. It is a time they are taught how to consciously and continuously care and save lives at all costs. Indeed, the length of study in medical school is one that is very demanding, and in kind, demands a determined personality.

I have given deep thought on what could be the cause for this inefficiency and have concluded that it may be due to a lack of determination, pursuance of wealth and the complimenting of societal status.

When you are not determined about a subject, it does not mean that you cannot accomplish the task. What it does mean, though, is that the rate of success cannot compare to one who is determined.

Second, the joy of every medical student, with the intention of becoming a medical professional, should be to save lives and not acquire wealth. No doubt, the unstable and dwindling economies of most African countries leads most youth to prefer to pursue lucrative professions, such as medicine, against true desires. The determining factor guiding this decision is a focus on how to acquire wealth in the shortest period of time after graduation.

For students with this mind-set, the money they will make spurs them into often considering a medical profession. These types of people do not care so much about the inner joys that come from rendering a service that saves the life of another human being.

Most of the time, you see these people engaged in so many unrelated businesses or professions to supplement his/her intent for wealth. These persons are not willing to render any medical assistance whatsoever, without a direct or indirect charge for such services, no matter how minimal.

The last concerns the goal of uplifting one’s social status. It is no news that some parents force their children to pursue some professional careers for the sake of uplifting or adding to their societal status or identities.

Actually living out the demands of the medical profession and practice is boring to them. When they do so, they often have somebody who is behind the scenes who is actually doing the work even though they continue to take the glory.

This last motivation is the worst motivation there is, and it is not fair. In fact, it is the worst of the others delineated herein, because their intentions thrive on deception.

No matter the state of the economy of states in Africa, one choosing to study medicine must do so with the aim of saving lives.

At no time, should this be compromised.

Most times, when the sick look for a total healing, they pray to God. And God — through the medical doctors — shares His healing power. Thus, those in medical professions should see themselves as “angels” in charge of making physical repairs to wounded bodies.

The sight of a good doctor by a sick patient offers enormous hope. A hope that can be of almost the same pedigree that sick patients seek God.

Any African medical students who keep this in mind will experience their successes go beyond borders.

SEE ALSO: Nigerian Government Unearths Nearly 24,000 Fake Workers in Payroll Audit

 

Innocent Iroaganachi

View Comments

  • i am sure the same could be said about many people in the medical profession all over the globe. I doubt it is an African problem. I have found some of my medical providers are quite ignorant in the USA and obviously committed to their patient. Be careful how you frame your headlines,

Recent Posts

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed becomes Kenya’s first-ever female air force head

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed is the first female commander of the air force and…

1 hour ago

All Benjamin E. Mays High School seniors gain admission to HBCU Morris Brown College in surprise announcement

Benjamin E. Mays High School brought together its 272 senior class members for a meeting…

4 hours ago

Meet the formerly incarcerated single mom who has gone viral for passing bar exam on first try

Afrika Owes' emotional response to learning that she had passed the bar exam on her…

4 hours ago

New York attorney accused of hiring hitman to kill Zimbabwean ex-wife sentenced

A 49-year-old New York attorney was on April 26 sentenced to 10 years in federal…

5 hours ago

Cher, 77, who is dating 38-year-old Alexander Edwards, explains why she dates younger men

During an appearance on The Jennifer Hudson Show on Wednesday, pop legend Cher opened up…

6 hours ago

11-year-old accidentally shot to death by 14-year-old brother with stolen gun

Authorities in Florida said an 11-year-old boy was accidentally shot and killed by his 14-year-old…

6 hours ago

16-year-old Ethiopian Hana Taylor Schlitz breaks sister’s record to become the youngest graduate from TWU

The famous Taylor Schlitz family is making headlines once more as the youngest of the…

20 hours ago

Tahra Grant is reportedly the first Black woman to be Chief Comms Officer at a major Hollywood studio

Sony Pictures Entertainment has appointed Tahra Grant as its Chief Communications Officer. She replaces Robert…

21 hours ago

How Ashley Fox quit her Wall Street job and built a startup to financially empower those Wall Street would never talk to

Meet Ashley M. Fox, the founder of Empify and the first in her family to…

21 hours ago

‘It wasn’t worth it’ – Tyra Banks says the first time she drank alcohol was when she was 50

Tyra Banks, the iconic former host of Dancing With the Stars, has made a delightful…

24 hours ago

Brazilian woman who wheeled dead uncle to bank to withdraw his money is being investigated for manslaughter

A Brazilian woman named Érika de Souza, 42, is under investigation for manslaughter after authorities…

1 day ago

For the first time, Ghana’s Asante King displays long-lost treasure looted by British forces in 1800s

Ghana’s Asante king Otumfuo Osei Tutu II has unveiled the long-lost treasure of the kingdom…

1 day ago

Colorado generated $113 million in Deion Sanders’ first season, here’s how

Deion Sanders is a retired American professional football and baseball player who currently coaches at…

1 day ago

Tiger Woods to receive $100M loyalty reward from PGA Tour: report

Tiger Woods is set to receive $100 million from PGA Tour Enterprises for his loyalty,…

1 day ago

Jalen Hurts’ $200,000 donation for ACs improves comfort for students in Philadelphia schools

Jalen Hurts, the Philadelphia Eagles' quarterback, has shown his affection for the community by contributing…

1 day ago