Samuel Manuwa

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Samuel Ayodeji Manuwa
Born 1903
Ogun State
Died 1976
Citizenship Nigeria
Ethnicity Yoruba
Institutions Colonial Medical Service, Lagos,
Alma mater University of Edinburgh
Known for Tropical Medicine
Notable awards Robert Wilson Memorial Prize in Chemistry,
Welcome Prize in Medicine

Samuel Manuwa (1903-1976) (KT, CMG, OBE), was a pioneering Nigerian surgeon, Inspector General of Medical Services and former Chief Medical Adviser to the Federal Government of Nigeria. He was the first Nigerian to pass the FRCS [1] and he graduated from the University of Edinburgh in 1934.[2] In 1966, he was elected president of the World Federation for Mental Health.

As Inspector General of Medical Services, he contributed immensely to the establishment of the University College Hospital, Ibadan, the first medical school in Nigeria, he later became a pro-chancellor and chairman of the governing council at the University of Ibadan. Throughout his career, he sought and worked for the improvement of basic heath services in the rural areas of Nigeria.

[edit] Life and education

Samuel Manuwa was born to the family of Reverend Benjamin Manuwa. He attended the Church Missionary School, Lagos and King's College, Lagos for secondary education, completing his studies in 1921. He then proceeded to study at the University of Edinburgh where he received a bachelor's degree in Chemistry and Medicine in 1926. He graduated with a several awards: the Robert Wilson Memorial Prize in Chemistry and the Welcome Prize in Medicine. He later went to study in Liverpool thereafter and completed a course on Tropical Medicine. He became a medical doctor in 1934.

[edit] Career

He returned to Nigeria in 1927 after finishing his studies on tropical medicine and joined the colonial medial services as a medical officer. He subsequently became a surgeon specialist and senior specialist in the service, where he gained acclaim as a skilled surgeon. Though, he received various offers for administrative positions early on, he continued his surgical work for over 18 years. While practicing as a surgeon, he invented an excision knife to treat tropical ulcers.[3]

In 1948, he lifted his embargo on administrative positions when he became the deputy director of medical services. In 1951, he was made the first Nigerian director of medical services and subsequently the Inspector General of medical services. He became fully involved with the Nigerian public service in 1954, when he was appointed the Chief Medical Adviser to the federal government of Nigeria. He later went on to become a member of the Privy Council of the Federation of Nigeria, President of the Association of Surgeons and Physicians in West Africa and the first Nigerian Commissioner of the Federal Public Service Commission.[4]

As Inspector General of Medical Services, he worked assiduously for the establishment of a University Teaching Hospital in the country. The result was the creation of UCH, Ibadan.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Patton, Adell, Jr. Physicians, Colonial Racism, and Diaspora in West Africa, University Press of Florida, 1996. p 299. ISBN 0813014328
  2. ^ Henry Bruce Macleod Best, Margaret and Charley: The Personal Story of Dr. Charles Best, the Co-Discoverer of Insulin, Dundurn Press Ltd. p 365. ISBN 1550023993
  3. ^ Obituary, The Lancet, Volume 306, Issue 7940, 1 November 1975, Pages 880-881
  4. ^ Bruce-Chwatt LJ. 'Obituary: Sir Samuel L.A. Manuwa', Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1976;70(2):173.