Kampala International University (KIU)
However, KIU Public Relations Officer, Kenneth Uki said while
awaiting completion of the hospital construction at the year-end, the
university had signed agreements with five public hospitals for academic
access to their facilities.
They include Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH), Temeke and Mwananyamala in Dar es Salaam, Tumbi and Kisarawe in Coast Region.
Meanwhile, The Guardian has confirmed that the university signed
Memorandums of Understanding (MoU) with MNH and Tanzania Veterinary
Laboratory Agency (TVLA) in December 2013 to allow academic access to
the hospital and to the laboratory facilities of the respective
institutions.
“The agency shall in conjunction with the university college allow
its employed Senior lecturers to train the university college medical
students on part time basis for duration that shall be agreed by both
parties to this MoU and the Senior lecturers from time to time,” reads
an extract from MoU.
“The agency shall allow the university college to use its
laboratory facilities for postgraduate students’ research work for the
duration that shall be agreed on by both parties to the MoU from time to
time,” said the excerpt.
The agreement also obliged the university to pay the agency “a fee
as prescribed by TVLA rates as an integral part of the MoU for every
student and for every time KIU uses its laboratory facilities.”
But KIU tells MNH that “the College is desirous to send its medical
students to MNH for clinical support services and medical laboratory
practical training in the latter’s specialized units to enable them to
develop the necessary knowledge, skills and attitudes in order to
provide high quality clinical, medical laboratory and pharmacy care to
the Tanzanian community.”
According to MoU, the hospital accepted the request and asked the
university to send a list of students and the department they would like
to rotate at least two weeks before commencement of the training.
However, a visit by The Guardian newspaper at KIU revealed four
laboratories for surgery, general practice in medicine, pharmacy and
pharmacy technology, but Uki said the facilities were off bound to all
first and second year students, given the government directive limiting
the access to only senior students starting third year.
“It’s very unfortunate that some students are ignorant of this
medical rule. In fact, it is the first year students here who are
insistent in demanding clinical rotation,” he said.
Meanwhile, it has been revealed that the students had other
concerns besides demanding recognition of their academic awards when
they went rampage last month attacking each other, people on the
streets, marauding and damaging property.
The situation drifted the university to chaos, sparking police intervention to restore peace and order at the campus.
Among others, the students demanded that the university should
reduce the number of course units per semester, lower fees as well as
blacklist foreign lecturers and staff members that they might be fired
because of low academic credentials.
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