HomeHealthNigeria Commits N217bn to Strengthen Medical Education

Nigeria Commits N217bn to Strengthen Medical Education

By Jack Acheme, Abuja

The Nigerian Government has committed over ₦217 billion to strengthen medical education and healthcare training across the country as part of efforts to build a stronger healthcare system anchored on quality education, research, innovation and human capital development.

Minister of Education, Dr. Maruf Olatunji Alausa, disclosed this at the opening of the Inaugural International Conference of the Faculty of Basic Clinical Sciences (FBCS), College of Medicine, University of Lagos.

Dr. Alausa in a statement by the Special Adviser Media and Communications, Ikharo Attah explained that the Nigerian Government invested the money within two years.

He noted that over ₦97 billion in medical education interventions was expended in 2025 through Special High Impact Projects aimed at expanding training capacity.

READ ALSO:Nigerian Government Launches N50m Fund to Support Cancer Patients

“While an additional ₦120.5 billion was approved in 2026 to support medical colleges through infrastructure upgrades, equipment procurement, expansion of teaching facilities and improvement of student learning environments,” he said.

According to him, President Bola Tinubu’s administration recognises that sustainable healthcare development depends on deliberate investment in institutions responsible for training doctors, nurses, pharmacists, scientists and other health professionals.

Speaking on the conference theme, “Precision in Practice: Integrating Diagnostics, Therapeutics, and Clinical Insights for Patient-Centered Care,” the Minister noted that advances in artificial intelligence, genomics, digital pathology and precision medicine are reshaping healthcare globally and must be reflected in Nigeria’s medical education system.

Medical Simulation and Technology Centres

The Minister further announced the establishment of Medical Simulation and Technology Centres nationwide to provide students with modern simulation-based learning that meets international standards and strengthens practical competence and clinical readiness.

Dr. Alausa described the work of the Faculty of Basic Clinical Sciences in precision medicine, cancer genomics, artificial intelligence, digital pathology, clinical research and biobanking as “strategic to Nigeria’s future in healthcare innovation and biomedical advancement.”

He also commended the Faculty for establishing a ₦1 Billion Endowment Fund and called on alumni, development partners, corporate organisations and philanthropists to support initiatives that promote excellence in medical education and research.

The Minister also spoke on Federal Government’s Approval for establishment of National Research and Innovation Development Fund (NRIDF) aimed at  Boosting Nigeria’s Science and Technology Sector.

Sustained Financing

Dr Alausa noted that the fund would provide sustained financing for research activities, innovation and commercialisation of discoveries across universities, research institutes and industries.

“The fund would address long-standing fragmentation in Nigeria’s research ecosystem by promoting collaboration among academia, government institutions and the private sector,” the Minister added.

Earlier, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lagos, Professor Folasade Ogunsola, described the conference as a major milestone reflecting the institution’s commitment to academic excellence, innovation and global competitiveness.

The VC noted that the Faculty was created to deepen biomedical research, diagnostic medicine and healthcare innovation.

Professor Ogunsola highlighted the Faculty’s achievements within a short period, including the hosting of its inaugural international conference, unveiling of its academic journal and launch of the ₦1 Billion Endowment Fund.

The Vice-Chancellor expressed confidence that it would emerge as one of Africa’s leading centres for biomedical research and scientific excellence.

The conference attracted scholars, clinicians, researchers, policymakers and development partners from within and outside Nigeria to explore innovative approaches to diagnostics, therapeutics and patient-centred healthcare.

 

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments