GMC says the schools no longer meet accepted standards of practice in the UK
Medical graduates from nine universities in Nigeria will no longer be
able to obtain licenses to practice in the United Kingdom, following a
decision by the UK's General Medical Council (GMC) to ban the higher
institutions.
The GMC, a body of independent regulators which registers medical
doctors to practise in the UK, took the decision to bar graduates from
the nine universities from writing PLAB.
PLAB is the UK exam that enables non-UK Medical graduates to undertake post-graduate medical training in the country.
The affected graduates are those who graduated after December 10, 2010
from Ambrose Ali University, Ebonyi State University, Ladoke Akintola
University of Technology (LAUTECH), Nnamdi Azikiwe University,
University of Jos, University of Nigeria and the University of Port
Harcourt.
It also applies to those who graduated on or after April 1, 2010 from
Igbinedion University College of Health Sciences and the University of
Benin.
According to Jason Day of the GMC's press office, the schools were axed
because they no longer meet the required standards for practise in the
UK.
He added that the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) had also
advised that they suspend accreditation of some medical schools in the
country.
“The decision only applies to students who graduated from those medical
schools after the MDCN suspended their accreditation,” Day said
Culled from Dailytimes.com
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