Friday, March, 6 2026 - The Federal Government of Nigeria has approved medical fellowships awarded by recognized professional medical colleges as equivalent to PhD degrees, ending a long-running debate about academic qualifications required for medical professionals in Nigerian universities.
The decision follows years of disagreement over whether
medical doctors must obtain a traditional PhD before advancing to the rank of
professor in academic medicine.
In 2016, the Medical and Dental Consultants’ Association of
Nigeria set up a committee that concluded that a PhD should remain the
qualification for teaching basic medical sciences. However, the committee also
recommended that teaching clinical aspects of medical programmes should require
a fellowship from the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria.
In 2021, the National Universities Commission ruled that
postgraduate medical fellowships from institutions such as the National
Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria, the West African College of Physicians
and the West African College of Surgeons were not equivalent to PhD degrees.
The commission later reaffirmed its position in 2023, stating that medical
academics must still obtain master’s and doctoral degrees to qualify for
professorship.
However, speaking to journalists in Abuja after a meeting of
the Federal Executive Council, Nigeria’s Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa,
announced that the federal government had now recognized medical fellowships as
PhD equivalents.
Alausa said the council approved amendments to the National
Postgraduate Medical College Act to remove barriers preventing highly
specialised doctors from progressing in academic careers.
“We need to remove the dichotomy of doctors who spent almost
16 years from medical school and their residency, and then doing their
fellowship, becoming super specialised,” he said. “The kind of degree we need
in Nigeria today for doctors is MBBS, Master of Medicine and Bachelor of
Surgery.”
He added that medical professionals often spend far more
years obtaining a PhD than other academic disciplines, noting that once the
executive bill is transmitted to the National Assembly of Nigeria, fellowships
awarded by the National Postgraduate Medical College will be treated as
equivalent to doctoral qualifications.
The meeting, presided over by Bola Tinubu, also approved
additional measures in the education sector, including a six-year ban on the
establishment of new privately owned universities, polytechnics and colleges of
education.
The council further restored the National Commission for
Mass Literacy Adult and Non formal Education to its full status as an
independent commission.

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