Text Only
Search

 
US-Zimbabwean University Project Targets Health Professional Brain Drain


09 August 2007
Interview With Dr. Chiedza Maponga audio clip
Listen to Interview With Dr. Chiedza Maponga audio clip

The University of Zimbabwe and the University of Buffalo, New York, have  launched a program whose organizers hope will eventually help curb the exodus of Zimbabwean health professionals, particularly in the area of pharmacology.

The program launch extends a project begun six years ago by senior researcher Dr. Chiedza Maponga of the University of Zimbabwe, and University of Buffalo Associate Dean for Clinical and Translational Research Gene Morse. 

Dr. Maponga, a visiting researcher at UB who travels regularly to Zimbabwe, said he was particularly concerned about the impact of brain drain on the fight against AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, Zimbabwe's biggest public health challenges.

Realizing the frustration caused among skilled health professionals by inadequate or outdated resources, Dr. Maponga said the UB-UZ project aimed to encourage such professionals to stay in the country and keep working in “resource poor settings.”

Dr. Maponga and his University of Buffalo partners hope the five-year program launched Thursday will ensure that young students with proper training and education remain challenged and committed to helping Zimbabwe combat its many health problems, despite the shrinking financial resources available to the sector.

A pioneer of the UB/UZ project is graduate student Tinashe Mudzviti of the University of Zimbabwe, who is due to return to Zimbabwe next week following his completion of a six-week training exercise conducted at the University of Buffalo.

Dr. Maponga told reporter Ndimyake Mwakalyelye of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that between 15 and 20 students will be recruited in the course of the program.

More reports from VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe...

 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
G-7 Nations Agree on Financial Action Plan  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
US, India Sign Civilian Nuclear Accord  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Kills at Least 30 in Pakistan's Northwest  Audio Clip Available
Obama Responds To McCain Character Attacks  Audio Clip Available
NATO to Target Opium Network Funding Taliban  Audio Clip Available
Russian Troops Withdraw from Georgia, But Is It Enough?  Audio Clip Available
Rice in Top-Level Consultations on North Korean Nuclear Impasse
19 Killed in Southern Peru Suspected Shining Path Attack
Asia's Markets Follow Wall Street With Panic Selling  Audio Clip Available
Obama, McCain Stress Bad Economy
Former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari Wins Nobel Peace Prize  Audio Clip Available
Turkish Air Strikes Target Kurdish Rebels in Iraq
Petraeus: Serious Ethnic Challenges Loom in Iraq  Video clip available
Israeli Police Deploy in Coastal Town After Jewish-Arab Clashes  Audio Clip Available
South Korea Says North's Nuclear Compromise May Be Near  Audio Clip Available
Financial Crisis Not Changing West African Desire to Migrate to US  Audio Clip Available
Nigerian Oil Workers to Strike  Audio Clip Available
As Election Day Approaches, US Presidential Contenders Trade Charges in TV Ads  Video clip available