(Daily Graphic, Jan 14, 2012, page 11)
NINE hundred and sixteen students, mainly females, were admitted to health training institutions in the Northern
Region during the 2011/12 academic year to pursue various health related
programmes.
Of the number, 153 were admitted to the
Nurses and Midwifery Training School in Tamale, whiles 105 students were
admitted to the Community Health Nurses Training School in Tamale.
The School of Hygiene, also in Tamale,
admitted 100 students and the remaining 558 were admitted to Health Assistants
Training Schools (HATS) situated in Damongo, Yendi, Nalerigu and Kpandai.
This came to light during the 3rd Joint
Matriculation Ceremony of the seven health training institutions located in the
Northern Region.
The function was held on the theme:
“Achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the role of the nurse and
environmental health trainee.”
Delivering a statement on behalf of the
principals of the seven training institutions, Mr Alfred Assibi, who is the
Principal for School of Hygiene, said the training institutions were bedevilled
with a number of challenges hindering the training process.
Key among these setbacks, he mentioned, are
poor infrastructure, lack of accommodation facilities, limited teaching and
learning materials and dwindling financial support from the government.
He also mentioned that the region had
only a few clinical sites and this had resulted in a situation where these
sites get congested when the students are sent on clinical practice.
Mr Assibi said when there is congestion,
the teaching and learning process is hindered because the preceptors are unable
to guide all the students and there is lack of space for free movement.
He also noted that apart from
congestion, the clinical sites were also poorly equipped.
Mr Thomas Tawiah, who spoke on behalf of
the Regional Director of Health, said the health directorate was concerned
about the situation where some students refuse postings to rural health
facilities.
He said this situation was regrettable,
noting that it was in the rural areas that their services were more needed.
Mr Tawiah said there had been
suggestions from some people that health trainees who go on clinical practice
should be reshuffled regularly so that those in the cities would also go to the
rural areas and vice versa.
He also noted that there was the need
for health training institutions to introduce quality assurance and customer
care into the school curriculum so as to churn out graduates who would approach
their job with professionalism and treat clients with respect.
1 comment:
PLEASE SALIFU NURIDEEN WOULD U HELP ME GET POST OFFICE BOX OF HEALTH ASSISTANT(CLINICAL) TRAINING SCHOOL.PLSE
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