The €1.2 million (TSh 2.95 billion) project was funded as part of a €17.2 million (TSh 42 billion) grant to AKU from the Federal Republic of Germany to improve health in East Africa by providing nurses and midwives with high-quality education and training. In addition to funding the renova
tion and expansion of Salama House, the grant includes funding to enable more students to attend AKU and has helped the University to develop the curriculum for its planned post-RM Bachelor of Science in Midwifery.
The East African Community played an important role in making it possible for AKU to receive the funding.
The opening was presided over by Dr. Gerd Müller, German Federal Minister of Economic Cooperation and Development; Dr. Helmut Schön, KfW Country Director for Tanzania; Dr. Richard Sezibera, Secretary General of the East African Community; Dr. Hamisi Kigwangalla, Tanzanian Deputy Minister of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly, and Children; and Mr. Al-Karim Haji, AKU Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer.
Dr. Müller outlined “Tanzania has a fraction of the highly skilled nurses and midwives it needs. More modern facilities for nursing and midwifery education are needed,” said Mr. Al-Karim Haji, AKU Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer. “With the opening of the new homeof our School of Nursing and Midwifery, we are helping to change that. The partnership between
AKU, the Federal Republic of Germany and the East African Community, plus the support of the Republic of Tanzania, will give more nurses and midwives an opportunity to improve their clinical and leadership capacities.”
“Aga Khan University is playing a leading role in the EAC’s effort to harmoni
ze and modernize nursing curricula and standards across member states,” said Dr. Richard Sezibera,Secretary General of the East African Community. “This facility is another example of AKU’s longstanding commitment to educating much-needed nurses and midwives to improve the quality of health care for EastAfricans, and of the Aga Khan Development Network’s broader contribution to improving the lives of East Africans.”
“The opening of this facility is a significant event in the development of nursing a nd midwifery in Tanzania,” said Dr. Hamisi Kigwangalla, Deputy Minister of Health, Commu nity Development, Gender, Elderly, and Children. “It will help Tanzania educate the kinds of nurses and midw ives we need: those who can tackle complex problems and ensure that all Tanzanians get the health car e they deserve.
Aga Khan University, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the East African Communit y have our appreciation.” AKU’s School of Nursing and Midwifery’s new home at Salama House on Urambo Stree t includes the resources needed to educate nursing and midwifery leaders using the latest me thods: a library with new digital resources, a computer lab, modern classrooms, and a high-quality scie nce lab and skills lab.
In addition to enhancing the quality of the School’s existing nursing programmes, the proje ct has also increased available space, which will allow AKU to launch a new post-RM Bachelor of Science in Midwifery programme and to train more working nurses through its professional de velopment programmes.
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