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An urgent appeal is to look into the activities of MDCN.

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I write to draw the attention of the Nigerian state that what is happening in the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) in assessing MBBS graduates who attended foreign universities is not transparent and is deficient in the essential ethical conduct of examinations universally.

They provide no marking scheme or any set standard known to guide the conduct of examinations, and results are only known to them. What happened last week (12-13th of July 2023) at Ibadan and the outcome of this year’s first leg of the two sessions they provide to such students attests to this concern.

Less than 30 per cent were declared to have passed the examination. Those deemed to have failed have no idea of their scores and segmental performance distribution to know where they are/were “defective” so that they can make amends.

Secondly, no post-examination assessment is conducted to educate the participants and the public about the reasons for the mass failure.

This is necessary because the goal, to my mind, of conducting examinations is to test the participants’ capacity not to pass a reckless nebulous judgment. Thirdly, most of the participants attended credible institutions that have better facilities than what we have. Their tutors are renowned on the world stage of the medical profession. Yet, their graduates, who they trained for years, are deemed weaklings in a few hours of examination by the Nigerian “gods”. The study over the years proved to be only a source of punishment rather than a mechanism for the growth of knowledge.

An urgent appeal is to look into the activities of MDCN.

The fourth point I want to raise is even more perplexing because if the claim of MDCN to “capacity” testing is valid, then our performance in health care delivery would have been acclaimed by the world. Nigerians won’t be rushing outside the country for medical attention at the slightest opportunity where these same graduates they are punishing were trained, leaving the medical space dominated by MDCN.

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Furthermore, it was generally reported by the participants that the ambience in the examination conduct was not only unfriendly but a precursor to them that they were only interacting with people on a journey to a predetermined destination.

Knowledge flourishes not through intimidation and indignation but through finesse and sound psychological preparedness. The examination is not a funeral event, and the people being tested are mostly young Nigerian citizens pursuing knowledge to improve their lives and their country.

My sincere appeal is for the Federal Government to look into the code of conduct of MDCN generally and its conduct of that testing examination in particular and make transparency prevail through making detailed results public for those that passed and those deemed to have failed with the segmental distribution of performance.

Furthermore, the law establishing the Council should be revisited to unbundle it and devolve its activities to remove the spectre of “cultist” pedigree now being associated with the Council.

Members of the National Assembly representing states from the North, whose students are constantly and consistently victimised, should lead this simple cause.

Let every geographical zone have its regulatory body on this matter because none lacks the manpower to evaluate foreign-trained medical doctors at this point in our history.

An urgent appeal to look into activities of MDCN

This was done to ICAN with the creation of ANAN, and our law schools are equally decentralised. The advantages are now apparent; MDCN should suffer the same fate, and the evil it perpetrates as an institution will follow the perpetrators.

In fact, taking a cue from the Sardauna episode, it is far safer to engage a foreigner to do your job than a neighbour whose agenda is unequivocally malicious.

World over, knowledge is nurtured, and those craving it are encouraged, not dehumanised, through a state-sanctioned institution like MDCN, turning students into victims of select MDCN officials with what may look like a sadistic expedition in the conduct of a mere testing examination.

We are rallying forces to ensure that a more comprehensive memo is produced to provide legal and procedural steps to address observed concerns in MDCN operations and free its victims eternally.

Bashir Adamu wrote from Shehu Shagari Close, Kaduna State.

An urgent appeal to look into activities of MDCN

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