'100 African docs to be trained in medical care in India'

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Hundred doctors from 10 African nations are to be trained at various facilities across the country, by experts of a private hospital, in advanced medical care, the group today said. The International Clinical Observership Programme, a public-private-initiative (PPP) of the and the is divided into four batches of 25 doctors each, it said. "The programme includes doctors from Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Algeria, Nigeria, and The first batch has already begun and it will end sometime this month," a of the said. The specialities offered under this programme include bone marrow transplant, foetal medicine, cardiology, anaesthesia, nephrology and pulmonology, the said in a statement. "By exposing them to the state-of-the-art, evidence-based prevention, diagnostic and management services, it is expected that these doctors will have ample experience to go back and apply it at solving critical medical cases in their countries," the group said. As per the recent World Organisation (WHO) estimates, the current workforce in the in sub- Saharan Africa needs to be scaled up by as much as 140 per cent to attain international development targets, it said. Ritu Garg, Head Clinical Talent and Academics at the said, "This is an opportunity to showcase how a publicprivate partnership model in can work wonders in supporting developing countries in building clinical capabilities." "The goal of this programme is to provide a strong clinical overview of specialities, share evidence-based best practices and with the doctors under the guidance of eminent clinicians across the Fortis network," it said.

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First Published: Tue, February 06 2018. 22:15 IST