FG moves to establish Armed Forces College of Medicine in Lagos
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Boriowo said the initiative would also address manpower shortages within the Armed Forces and expand Nigeria’s overall medical training capacity
The Federal Government says it has advanced plans to establish the Armed Forces College of Medicine and Health Sciences (AFCOM&HS) to strengthen military healthcare services.
This is contained in a statement made available to newsmen on Saturday in Abuja by Folasade Boriowo, Director, Press and Public Relations, Federal Ministry of Education.
Boriowo said the initiative would also address manpower shortages within the Armed Forces and expand Nigeria’s overall medical training capacity.
She quoted the Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, as disclosing this development at a high-level meeting with the Minister of Defence, retired Gen. Christopher Musa, and other stakeholders.
In attendance at the meeting were the Minister of State for Education, Prof. Suwaiba Ahmad and the Minister of State for Defence, Dr Bello Matawalle.
Alausa said the proposed college aligned with the Federal Government’s reform agenda, particularly efforts to strengthen Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematica and Medical Sciences Education’.
He said the college would provide a structured and sustainable pipeline of military-trained doctors, surgeons, trauma specialists, emergency response medics and allied health professionals.
According to him, Nigeria faces a growing shortage of medical professionals amid a population of over 240 million people.
He said the country had a deficit of about 340,000 doctors, stressing the need for scalable and innovative training models.
Alausa said the ministry had doubled annual medical school admissions from about 5,000 to nearly 10,000.
He added that projections were underway to increase the figure to about 19,000 annually in the coming years.
The minister said the new college would form a critical component of the expansion strategy.
He said in compliance with the Federal Government’s seven-year moratorium on new tertiary institutions, the Nigerian Defence Academy would establish the college within its existing framework.
According to him, the institution will be located in Lagos State and linked to accredited federal and military hospitals for clinical trainings.
Alausa said trainings would be anchored at designated military medical facilities, including the 68 Nigerian Army Reference Hospital and the 661 Nigerian Air Force Hospital in Lagos.
He said medical cadets would undergo an eight-year programme comprising six years of academic training, one year of military training and one year of housemanship.
The minister said the graduates would be equipped with medical expertise, discipline, leadership skills and operational readiness for military service.
He added that a Technical Working Group had been constituted to ensure regulatory compliance and quality assurance.
According to him, its members include representatives of the Ministries of Education and Defence, the Nigerian Defence Academy and relevant professional and regulatory bodies.
He said the objective was to ensure that admissions commence by October or November 2026.
Alausa expressed appreciation to President Bola Tinubu for his support for human capital development and national security.
He reaffirmed the ministry’s commitment to working with its defence and regulatory partners to deliver the initiative in compliance with the extant national standards and global best practices.
(NAN)
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