Ronke Kehinde/
Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, says his promise that the state government would employ the first set of medical graduates of the Ekiti State University (EKSU) Medical School is borne out of his desire to encourage the young graduates and other youths that there will always be light at the end of every tunnel.
He spoke today as the 43 pioneer medical graduates were being inducted into the medical profession in Ado-Ekiti, following the full accreditation of the college.
Speaking at the induction ceremony which took place at the University Campus, Fayemi reinstated his promise that the government would employ as many of them that would want to work with the State after their house-job and national youth service.
The injection of the new doctors into health institutions in the state, according to Fayemi would also help the administration’s plan for excellent health care delivery.
The governor who noted the delay in the accreditation of the college which made the students spent 10 years for the six-year course, however, commended them for their resilience. He said the students would have been “saved the pain and frustration they experienced” if the immediate past administration had provided support for the College of Medicine where he stopped in 2014.
Fayemi said the students were likely to have stayed longer if his administration had not come on board in 2018 to provide the necessary support that made the final MDCN accreditation possible.
“I recall that the graduating students were barely a year in school when my government came into office in October 2019 and by the time we left in 2014, the basic medical programme was accredited, the physiology and biochemistry laboratory buildings were completed, the medical hostel was built and majority of the departments at the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital had received accreditation.”
“If the succeeding administration had paid equal attention to the College of Medicine, the credit of graduating this first set of students would have gone to that administration while the students and their parents would have been saved the pain and frustration they experienced on this journey,” he said.
While justifying the attention given to the College of Medicine by his administration, the governor said the College, as well as the State University Teaching Hospital, would greatly contribute to the successful implementation of the health policies of his government for the benefit of the citizenry.
Fayemi, who commended two of his predecessors in office, Otunba Niyi Adebayo and Chief Segun Oni, for their huge investment in the medical college, said his administration would continue to take proactive steps to deepen preventive healthcare programmes.
He disclosed that the state government has keyed into the Basic Healthcare Provision Fund to rapidly increase coverage of high impact health interventions.
The governor charged the new doctors not to rest on their oars but put in their best to ensure quality healthcare delivery.
In her speech, the acting Vice-Chancellor of Ekiti State University, Prof. Olubunmi Ajayi thanked Governor Fayemi for providing the logistics and financial support for the final accreditation of the College of Medicine.
The acting Vice-Chancellor said the governor had come to the school’s rescue when it was at a “crossroads due to financial constraints and the graduation of our medical students was becoming an albatross”; adding that the governor’s gesture would continue to be a ” timeless memento “.
Prof Ajayi also thanked the Governor’s wife, Erelu Bisi Fayemi for paying the school fees of some of the indigent students in the College of Medicine, in order to ensure they do not drop out of school.
Earlier, the Provost of the College, Prof. Kehinde Oluwadiya had disclosed that the immediate past administration had ” made it clear that it was not ready to fund” the final accreditation despite the fact that the University and parents of the medical students had done their best.
Oluwadiya said Fayemi’s uncommon interest in the medical college was demonstrated when he approved all that the College needed for the final accreditation within three weeks.
Also speaking, the best graduating student, Dr Iyanu Bankole thanked the governor for rescuing the students from years of frustration and hopelessness.
Bankole described Fayemi as a man with a large heart; adding that his support gave all the final year medical students the opportunity to face their final examination without worries.
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