باترك دارسي مؤسس كلية الصيدلة جامعة الخرطوم
D’Arcy, Founder of Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Khartoum
In 1954, MOH requested WHO to send a consultant to advise on pharmacy education. WHO assigned Prof. Mohamed Mohamed Motawea, Prof. of Pharmacology and Dean Faculty of Pharmacy,Cairo
University to assess the
curriculum, facilities, students and graduates of the School of Dispensers .
Prof. Motawea, in his mission report, made the following recommendations:
In 1954, MOH requested WHO to send a consultant to advise on pharmacy education. WHO assigned Prof. Mohamed Mohamed Motawea, Prof. of Pharmacology and Dean Faculty of Pharmacy,
1-
The School of Dispensers
should be closed immediately as it does not serve any useful purpose.
2-
A faculty of pharmacy should
immediately be established in UCK.
3-
In the meantime and until the
faculty of pharmacy is established, selected students can be sent to study
pharmacy abroad.
The three
recommendations were accepted and followed up by the MOH. In 1961, the
government contacted USA Operation Mission to Sudan , which offered to train three
batches of selected secondary school graduates at the Faculty of Pharmacy of
the American University of Beirut (AUB) in 1961, 1962
and 1963. Prof. Ibrahim took part in the selection and processing of the first
group of six secondary school graduates who were appointed by the MOH and
started their studies at AUB in 1961.[i]
A second group of two students followed in 1962 and a third and last group of
four followed in 1963. Most of these students returned five years later as graduate
pharmacists, but fewer than half of them chose to stay and work in the public
sector.
The MOH,
which was well represented in the FOM, UK and in the UK Council, used its
influence to convince UK
institutions to endorse and follow up on the need to establish a Faculty of
Pharmacy. In 1962, a decision was taken to that effect. Prof. Patrick F.
D’Arcy,[ii] Prof.
of Pharmacology at The Queen’s University of Belfast
and Prof. of Pharmacology, FOM ,
UK at the time,
was appointed as the first founding Dean of the new Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Khartoum (FOP , UK ).
He was assigned the task of establishing and preparing the faculty to receive
its first batch of pharmacy undergraduates who would be selected to spend their
first session 1963-64 of the five-year Bachelor of Pharmacy course in the
Faculty of Science. They would start their second session in 1964 in the new
Faculty of Pharmacy. It was a great challenge to Prof. D’Arcy who managed to
formulate the 4-year pharmacy curriculum, recruit expatriate academic staff,
prepare temporary lecture rooms and laboratories and receive his first batch of
eighteen Pharmacy undergraduates in 1964, as planned, after completing their
first year course in the Faculty of Science.
Prof. D’Arcy appointed a number of newly graduated
Sudanese pharmacists as academic assistants to be trained and eventually
qualified as lecturers. He was also able to recruit a number of qualified
Sudanese chemists as lecturers in organic chemistry, analytical chemistry and
pharmacology. In 1967, Prof. D’Arcy was superceded by Dr Ibrahim Gasim Mokhier,
who became the first Sudanese Dean. In 1968, the first batch of eighteen
pharmacists graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in pharmacy from FOP , UK .
In support of the
newly established Faculty, Prof. Ibrahim allowed two of the NCL chemists (the
late Prof. Rifaat Botrous and the late Associate Prof. Mobarak Ali Karrar) to
be permanently transferred to the Faculty of Pharmacy to relieve its staff
shortage. Prof. Ibrahim later became a member of the Faculty Board of Pharmacy
during the period 1969-1972 by virtue of his post of Director CMS. For many
years, he has been an external examiner in faculty examinations and supervisor
and/or external examiner to many postgraduate pharmacy students.
The School of Dispensers was finally closed when the
pharmacy students completed their first session and moved to the Faculty of
Pharmacy in 1964.
In 1966, MOH
established a school of pharmaceutical assistants who (like other medical
assistants) were selected from qualified nurses from different provincial
hospitals and given a training course of two years.
[i]
The six students were Abdel-Rahman Al-Rasheed Sid Ahmed, Gasim Ibrahim Gasim
Mokheir, Mohamed Hamed Abdalla, Hassan Mohamed
Ahmed Hassan, Mohamed Awad Omer El Huwaig, and Abdel Azim El Sheikh Medani.
[ii]
Patrick F. D’Arcy (1927-2001), OBE, Bpharm, PhD, DSc, DSc (Hon), FRPharmS,
Cchem, FRSC, FPSNI. Prof. Emeritus of Pharmacy in The Queen’s University of
Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom, formerly Prof. of Pharmacology and
Dean, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Khartoum, Sudan (1962-1967).
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