The Department of Nursing of Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and
Technology (KNUST) has celebrated its 10th anniversary of the training
of nurses and midwives. The theme of the anniversary was “Transforming
the Image of Nursing and Midwifery: The Role of Tertiary Education.”
Dr. Mrs. Victoria Bam, Head of the Nursing Department, in her speech
said the department started as a very small one in the Faculty of Health
Sciences with about forty (40) students and three (3) lecturers. She
explained that notwithstanding the challenges they faced, the department
can boast about having graduated over three hundred and seventy (370)
students. She showed her sincere gratitude to the various tertiary
institutions overseas which had contributed to the development of the
Nursing Department of KNUST.
She added that through the relentless effort of both staff and
students the department had become one of the best in the faculty in
terms of academic excellence. The Department has exchange programmes
with many tertiary institutions around the world. She hoped that the
Department would work hard to achieve their vision which is “to become a center of excellence for nursing education, practice and research in Africa.”
Professor William Otoo Ellis, Vice Chancellor also remarked that
KNUST has the vision to advance knowledge in science and technology for
sustainable development in Ghana in particular and Africa as a whole.
This vision, he added, could effectively be achieved through the
training of quality human resource to facilitate the country’s dream of
economic transformation. He explained that KNUST as a science and
technology university, therefore, served as a platform for the
industrial and socio-economic development of the country. Professor
Ellis congratulated the stakeholders and lecturers of the department for
the successes achieved and urged them not to relax since their hard
work had become evident in the stiff competition of applicants for
places in the department during the recent admission exercise.
In a keynote address, the Executive Secretary for the National
Council for Tertiary Education, Prof. Mahama Duwiejua, described
nursing as a noble profession which required God’s guidance. He added
that In spite of the negative perceptions and criticism attached to the
profession, nurses were in high demand in the society. He remarked that
it was not surprising that nursing was one of the hottest programmes on
offer in the university. He advised the nurses that health care in the
21st century required teamwork, knowledge and creativity and
therefore, tertiary institutions needed to inculcate not only book
knowledge but such qualities in their students.
Also present at the ceremony was Prof. E. T. Agbenyega, Provost of
the College of Health Science who chaired the ceremony; Mrs. Philomena
Woolley, Registrar of the Nurses and Midwifery Council; Mr. George Kumi
Kyeremeh, Director – Nursing and Midwifery Council; Rev. Fr. J.
Appiah-Poku, Dean of the Faculty of Allied Health Sciences and a host of
other personalities.
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