Dr.
Raphael D. Folitse, Dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine, Kwame
Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) has called for
efforts to make veterinary practice more attractive.
He said
they should be motivated with incentive packages to help retain them to
assist and significantly improve animal health services, and also
prevent animal disease outbreaks and spread.
Dr Folitse was
speaking during an oath-swearing and induction ceremony held for 10
newly qualified veterinarians from the school in Kumasi.
That was
the first time veterinary doctors have been trained locally as the
nation had over the years relied largely on Eastern Europe, Cuba,
Nigeria and Kenya to train its veterinarians.
Dr. Folitse said
“please do not frustrate and drive them away to search for greener
pastures elsewhere because Ghana needs them”.
Currently, less
than 200 veterinarians are working in the country, a development that is
hampering effective veterinary services delivery.
Dr. Folitse
noted that the veterinary doctors were graduating amid sporadic outbreak
of animal-borne diseases such as anthrax, rabies and re-emergence of
bovine tuberculosis, avian influenza and Ebola, which were a threat to
human health and asked that they worked hard to tackle them.
It
is estimated that about 70 per cent of infectious diseases that affect
human beings originate from animals and this makes their job vital to
the safety of the people.
The Dean appealed for massive
investment in veterinary medicine, saying, “the importance of veterinary
medicine worldwide has never been greater in the face of the challenges
facing the animal industry”.
Dr. William Amanfu, Chairman of the
Veterinary Council of Ghana, reminded the graduating doctors to uphold
professional ethics in the discharge of their duties.
He advised them to show greater respect to their senior colleagues, particularly during the period of their houseman-ship. |
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