How Building Medical Schools In Africa Can Heal A Worldwide Crisis with Sir Tanimola Oyewole (Senegal & Nigeria)
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
-
ナレーター:
-
著者:
Send us Fan Mail
The waiting lists are getting longer, the clinicians are exhausted, and the pipeline isn’t keeping up. We sit down with economic development strategist Sir Tanimola Oyewole to map a practical, ethical way to close the global health worker gap without draining the very systems that need help most.
Our conversation starts with the uncomfortable truth: high-income countries face ageing populations, rising demand, and costly training, while lower-income nations invest in talent only to watch it migrate. Toin outlines a smarter path—build and scale accredited teaching hospitals across Africa, where youth demographics are strong and costs are dramatically lower. By co-designing curricula with destination medical councils, sponsoring nations like the UK, Canada, or the US could ensure graduates are practice-ready while expanding capacity tenfold for the same spend. It’s not charity; it’s efficient, long-horizon workforce planning that strengthens local health systems now and meets global needs later.
We dive into the mechanics that make this work. Service bonds create fairness: graduates contribute five years to the country that trained them, then move to the sponsoring country for twenty, with an open invitation to return and share advanced skills. International students—Americans, Europeans, Asians—can also train at these institutions to bypass cost barriers and limited seats at home. We address accreditation alignment, reconcile six-year and eight-year medical education paths, and explore the political realities that demand visible results early on. The outcome is a blueprint that turns brain drain into brain circulation, grows clinician numbers at scale, and builds resilient hospitals where patients need them most.
If you care about healthcare access, medical education, and practical solutions that balance equity and efficiency, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a colleague who works in health policy or medical education, and leave a review with your take on how to make this model a reality.
Music, lyrics, guitar and singing by Dr Ariel Rosita King
Teach me to live one day at a time
with courage love and a sense of pride.
Giving me the ability to love and accept myself
so I can go and give it to someone else.
Teach me to live one day at a time.....
Support the show
The Business of Life
Dr Ariella (Ariel) Rosita King
Original Song, "Teach Me to Live one Day At A Time"
written, guitar and vocals by Dr. Ariel Rosita King
Dr King Solutions (USA Office)
1629 K St, NW #300,
Washington, DC 20006, USA,
+1-202-827-9762
DrKingSolutons@gmail.com
DrKingSolutions.com