Home Features Jamaica, University of the Philippines forge historic partnership to train specialist nurses

Jamaica, University of the Philippines forge historic partnership to train specialist nurses

  • Partnership to also yield faculty and nursing exchanges

 

KINGSTON, Jamaica. Tuesday, April 8, 2025: Jamaica and the Philippines have cemented their historic partnership to tackle human resources for health, with the signing of a communique with the University of the Philippines Manila (UP Manila).

 

“The partnership will see remote and face-to-face training of Jamaican registered nurses specialising in a range of clinical practices by faculty from the Philippines. Those nurses will then then do a short stint of clinical rotation in the Philippines. This will address the challenge of the shortage of Jamaican faculty and clinical rotation space,” said Minister of Health & Wellness, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton, MP, from the Philippines.

 

Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton, MP, (second from right), Minister of Health and Wellness of Jamaica shares a photo moment with Dr. Michael Lee (second from left), Chancellor of the University of the Philippines Manila; Dr. Gerardo D. Legaspi, Director, Philippine General Hospital, University of the Philippines Manila; and Dr. Sheila Bonito, Dean of the College of Nursing at the University of the Philippines Manila. The occasion was the signing of a communique on human resources for health between Jamaica and the University of the Philippines Manila.

 

“The partnership, which is intended to develop training programmes with UP Manila’s College of Nursing and the Philippine General Hospital will also see the training of trainers to enhance the country’s capacity to expand offerings on the island,” the Minister added.

 

The communique, meanwhile, represents the first fruits of a Memorandum of Understanding that was signed between the two countries in January, when the Secretary of Health for the Philippines, Dr. Teodoro Herbosa, visited the island.

 

Speaking at a press conference following the official signing ceremony this morning, Dr. Tufton welcomed the partnership with the university and the hospital while affirming the value of the Jamaica-Philippines collaboration.

 

The collaboration has its genesis in the common vision to provide global leadership on expanding training for healthcare workers, shared by the Minister and Secretary Herbosa in the halls of the 77th World Health Assembly a year ago.

 

“What we have conceptualised and are developing is a sustainable model of working together to expand faculty, to train trainers who are Jamaicans and, of course, other opportunities to train more Jamaicans in the specialised nursing areas, in the first instance,” Dr. Tufton said.

 

“What that will do is allow more Jamaicans to be qualified in the various specialised areas such as oncology, paediatrics, and critical care, to work in our hospitals and support the people of Jamaica,” he added.

 

It also demonstrates, the Minister noted, what is possible with South-South cooperation.

 

“It shows that South-South cooperation is possible when we share a common vision. You [the Philippines] are 115 million, we are three million but nevertheless we can show leadership. What we are doing is very important because it is saying to world that unless we collaborate around expanding the pool of healthcare workers, it is going to be very lopsided and there is going to be inequity in how we treat with the citizens of the world in their respective countries,” the Minister said.

 

The Philippines trains some 10,000 nurses each year, has 87 public hospitals and more than 300 additional facilities that are run privately or by the municipal authority.