Lagos State Tackles Healthcare Workforce Shortage With Medical Education Expansion.
The Lagos State Government has announced a significant shortfall in healthcare professionals, including a deficit of 30,000 doctors and a critical shortage of nurses, pharmacists, dentists, laboratory scientists, and other allied health workers.
Government’s Strategic Response
Addressing the crisis, the Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akin Abayomi, revealed that the state has embarked on an ambitious plan to strengthen medical education and expand training facilities. Speaking during the official handover of key medical infrastructure for conversion into modern academic facilities, he highlighted that the initiative is a response to the sustained migration of medical professionals.
“This expansion forms part of a two-pronged strategy approved by Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to address the healthcare workforce shortage. The first approach focuses on increasing the number of healthcare professionals by scaling up student intake, which requires a substantial expansion of tertiary education infrastructure,” Abayomi stated.
Boosting Medical Training Capacity
To achieve this goal, the government has approved a phased expansion of medical training facilities. The initiative aims to increase the annual intake of students in medicine, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy, and allied health sciences from the current 200 to 2,500 over the next five years.
The second approach focuses on ensuring high-quality training by securing accreditation from regulatory bodies. Abayomi outlined three key requirements to achieve this:
– Adequate training space to accommodate the growing number of students.
– A sufficient number of academic instructors to provide quality education.
– Access to a diverse patient population for hands-on clinical training.
Collaboration and Stakeholder Support
The Commissioner expressed gratitude to Governor Sanwo-Olu and his deputy, Dr Obafemi Hamzat, for their swift response to the crisis. He also acknowledged the role of the Ministry of Tertiary Education in ensuring the success of the initiative.
Commissioner for Tertiary Education, Tolani Sule, described the project as a crucial step towards addressing the human capital deficit in the health sector. “Lagos is land-constrained, so we must maximise existing facilities. The Ministry of Health has wisely repurposed underutilised assets to expand medical education infrastructure,” he said.
Vice-Chancellor of Lagos State University (LASU), Prof. Ibiyemi Olatunji-Bello, stressed that the expansion project is vital for securing accreditation from relevant regulatory bodies, while the Chief Medical Director of Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Prof. Adetokunbo Fabamwo, described the initiative as a long-overdue response to the state’s growing healthcare demands.
Commitment to Excellence
Assuring the public of quality project execution, the General Manager of the Lagos State Infrastructure Asset Management Agency (LASIAMA), Adenike Adekanbi, pledged that her agency would oversee the construction process to ensure high standards are maintained.
With this initiative, Lagos State is taking decisive steps to bridge the gap in healthcare workforce shortages and improve medical education, ultimately strengthening the state’s healthcare system for the future.