Aga
Khan University Announces
the Faculty of Health
Sciences in East Africa
Nairobi, Kenya, 13 August
2007 – His Highness
the Aga Khan, Chancellor of the Aga Khan University,
accompanied by Professor George Saitoti, Kenyan Minister
for Education, today inaugurated the Faculty of Health
Sciences of the Aga Khan University
(AKU-FHS) – East
Africa’s first premier private medical school.
The US $250 million health sciences campus to be
established in Nairobi, aims to provide international
standard education for doctors, nurses and allied
health professionals. It will comprise a Medical
College, a School of Nursing and allied health programmes
and will offer degrees at bachelors, masters and
PhD levels. The Faculty aims to build local capacity
and will enable implementation of health care services
with world class infrastructure and quality. The
campus will consist of academic facilities, student
residences and amenities which will include a library,
student centre and auditorium as well as sports facilities.
In addition, significant expansion of the hospital
will also take place to support the growth in academic
programmes.
Speaking at the launch of the Faculty, the Aga Khan,
who is also founder and Chairman of the Aga Khan
Development Network (AKDN), commented, “Building
on the success of its existing programmes – the
Aga Khan University is planning to establish a new
Faculty of Health Sciences here in Nairobi. To my
knowledge, this will be the first private sector
university in Eastern Africa to create a full-fledged
Faculty of Health Sciences offering under-graduate
and post-graduate degrees in Medicine, Nursing and
the allied health sciences”.
The Faculty is the first social development initiative
announced by the Aga Khan as part of his Golden Jubilee
celebrations, marking his 50 years as the Imam (spiritual
leader) of the Shia Ismaili Muslims.
In keeping with the Aga Khan University’s
overall vision in Africa, to provide quality healthcare
and education in the region, the AKU-FHS will focus
on producing effective leaders in health care through
professional health education, engaging in best practices
and developing self sustaining models of health care
delivery. In addition, the AKU-FHS will promote relevant
high impact research, particularly in the areas of
health services and epidemiology that will have an
impact on influencing health policy.
Kenya’s Education Minister Professor George
Saitoti, said the Aga Khan initiative could not come
at a better time. “Our public universities
are able to absorb only about 10,000 students each
year, representing 20 to 26 percent of candidates
who attain a mean grade of C+ and above,” he
said. The minister noted that the government attached
particular importance to health and education in
its long-term Economic Recovery Strategy. “Health
and education are key sectors we have identified
as pillars in the vision 2030,” he said .
Work on the new Faculty’s Heart and Cancer
Centre is expected to commence later this year. This
US $40 million initiative will replace and enhance
existing facilities in surgery, obstetrics, critical
care and imaging, and provide facilities for the
tertiary treatment services in cardiology and cancer.
The Centre will serve communities in the Eastern
Africa region and will enable the hospital to educate
residents and nurses in an innovative, technology-enabled
teaching environment.
The Aga Khan University (AKU) was established and
chartered in 1983 as an international university
within the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), a
group of private, non-denominational development
agencies and institutions working together to improve
living conditions and opportunities in over 30 of
the poorest countries in the developing world. The
University has 11 teaching sites in 8 countries,
including the Aga Khan University Hospital in Nairobi
which has been in operation in Nairobi for over 50
years under the aegis of the Aga Khan Health Services.
The transition to the Aga Khan University Hospital
commenced in 2005 with a vision of becoming a premier
tertiary, teaching and referral hospital serving
sub-Saharan Africa.
Today one-third of the total AKU student body worldwide
is enrolled in academic programmes in Kenya, Uganda
and Tanzania. The Advanced Nursing Studies Programme
delivers certificate and degree programmes to upgrade
the quality of nursing in all three countries, while
Postgraduate Medical Education Programmes in Nairobi
and Dar es Salaam provide advanced training to aspiring
medical specialists. In addition, the University
has launched the Institute of Educational Development
also in Dar es Salaam to enable teachers to upgrade
their capabilities by learning from innovative curriculum
design, pedagogy and assessment.
The AKU is committed to the development of leaders
in East Africa, and pays particular attention to
equipping them with critical thinking and problem
solving skills to enable them to address the challenges
facing their own communities and societies; at full
capacity, there will be 3000 students. In developing
the multiple campuses and new programmes in East
Africa, AKU will invest over $700 million in the
region over the next fifteen years, providing direct
employment to approximately 4,000 people on an ongoing
basis.
For more information, please contact:
Asmita Gillani
Chief Executive Officer
Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi
Tel: 254 20 3750185
Wanjiru Mwangi Ruhanga
Communications Officer
AKDN Kenya
wanjiru.ruhanga@akdnkenya.org
+ 254 721 217 499
Semin Abdulla
Information Officer
Secretariat of His Highness the Aga Khan
Information@aiglemont.org
Tel: + 254 733 530 053
NOTES
Golden Jubilee of His Highness the
Aga Khan
His Highness the Aga
Khan completed his 50th year as the 49th hereditary
Imam of the Shia Ismaili Muslims on 11th July 2007,
succeeding his grandfather, Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah.
The Aga Khan leads a community of 15 million Ismaili
Muslims living in some 25 countries around the world
and is a direct descendant of the Prophet Muhammad
(peace be upon him and his family). In the Ismaili
tradition, the Imam’s Jubilee
celebrations offer occasions to launch new social,
cultural and economic development projects. In keeping
with the ethics of the faith, these projects aspire
to improve the quality of life for the most vulnerable
in society. During the Jubilee year, the Aga Khan
is expected to travel to a number of countries to
meet with members of the Ismaili community and visit
projects of the AKDN. He is also likely to announce
the creation of new development institutions and
projects and the significant expansion of existing
ones.
The Aga Khan Development Network
His
Highness the Aga Khan is founder and Chairman of
the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), a group
of private, non-denominational development agencies
working to empower communities and individuals to
improve living conditions and opportunities, especially
in sub-Saharan Africa, Central and South Asia, and
the Middle East. The Network’s nine development
agencies focus on social, cultural and economic development
for all citizens, regardless of gender, origin or
religion. The AKDN’s underlying ethic is compassion
for the vulnerable in society. Its annual budget
for philanthropic activity is in excess of US$ 300
million.
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