Prof. Ademola Olugbenga Awoyemi Bows out of the University of Ilorin. By Mubarak Oladosu

Date: 2021-02-08

On Wednesday, January 27, 2021, one of the most experienced hands in mass healthcare in the country, Prof. Ademola Olugbenga Awoyemi, bowed out of the University of Ilorin where he has been a Professor of Epidemiology and Community Health and a lecturer since the early 80s, upon joining the septuagenarian club. In an environment where life expectancy is some 20 years less, clocking the age of 70 is a monumental grace. It is an age that attracts compliments greater than respect. I reckon 70 as the first age of reverence. Prof. Awoyemi's retirement is therefore a due and well-deserved rest. It is a time in which he would reflect joyfully, as he reminisce on the decades he had spent serving humankind, to the best of his ability. He would joyfully recall how he had inspired generations of doctors as a lecturer and as a medical practitioner for close to five decades, for the rest of his life. Retirements, such as his, however, come with a tinge of mixed feelings for keen and current observers, who would note that this doctor-don has become a retiree at a time when Nigeria, and indeed the world, cannot have too many experienced hands on deck, in tackling the Coronavirus pandemic. This is because the virus, which now has new variants, is extremely violent, as it sneaks around in silence. It continues to threaten us with novel and more deadly variants and it threatens us with the probability of new strains.

Born in Iperu-Remo, Ogun State, Professor Awoyemi trained as a physician at the University College Hospital, Ibadan,before he specialised as one of those medical practitioners whose clinic is whole communities, cities and even larger human settlements. For Awoyemi, the Ilorin township was his major clinic, and his work space extends to other parts of Kwara State and also crossed boundaries to some of the states in the far north of Nigeria. He also made impact beyond the nation's frontiers. In Ghana as well as in Britain, Professor Awoyemi's researches helped in improving community wellbeing. Very few sacrifices compete with his choice of career, and none will dismiss his choice. Few will match it; none will diminish the practice of medicine. In his own particular specialisation, from the unborn to the elderly, from the agile youth population to those who used to be as humans, indeed, across all categories of human life, his kind of career touches us all.In the beginning, the retiring medical practitioner practiced in clinics which were offices and cubicles, but for most of his career and practice, his clinic were those communities where he made his diagnosis and declared his prognosis. Prescriptions, in his line of duty, were too lengthy for pieces of paper. They were always very complex for they were not meant for individuals, but for a mass or masses of people. Those prescriptions were, therefore, often published in scientific journals and publicised as technical reports.

In the course of his training, which were mostly in Ibadan and Britain, and his career which was mostly in the service of indigenes and residents of Ilorin and elsewhere in northern Nigeria, Prof. Awoyemi studied and published on child feeding practices, health problems and working conditions of workers in the stone quarry industry of Britain and Nigeria, socio-economic Impact of soil transmitted Helminthiases in Nigeria, stool parasite profile as an index of environmental sanitation in Ilorin, procured and induced abortion in Ilorin, pulmonary tuberculosis in a rural community in Kwara State, occupational health problems of sawmill workers in Ilorin, medical examination of army recruits in Ilorin; knowledge, attitude and practice of family planning among religious and community leaders in Ilorin; ergonomic problems associated with muscular and skeletal disorders among traditional cloth weavers In Ilorin; malaria morbidity amongst hospital workers in Ilorin; influence of environmental sanitation practices and hygiene on incidence of diarrhea in Koforidua Municipality, Ghana, as well as Technical Reports on National Immunization days in different parts of Nigeria, at different times. Similarly, in the year 2000, he was co-author of the report entitled "Community Based Experience And Service (COBES): Twenty-Five Years of Innovative Medical Education at The Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ilorin", to list but a fraction of his scholarly publications. The collaborative research among these publications also highlights him as a scholar who is a team player.

In the classroom, his career was among other things, a platform to nurture for posterity. Former students recall his towering physical height and grace that's rivalled by a few things among which is his dedication and service. The courses he taught were assurances of progress and lifelines against the threat of aborted dreams among medical students under examination. Others would recall as he commuted with them to rural communities, far from the luxury that electricity and pipe-borne water avails urban dwellers, as they camped in villages and hamlets to practically learn how to forestall epidemics, pandemics and much more, as they collectively begin a journey towards successfully answering one of life's most crucial questions, what is it that they will do to improve the wellbeing of others?

In the science and practice of epidemiology and community health, Professor Awoyemi had seen it all and his record of service stands tall. He is a gentleman who abhors publicity but I am sure his colleagues and students, along with our people in Ilorin township and beyond, will agree with Benjamin Franklin who opines that if a career is remarkable like Professor Ademola Olugbenga Awoyemi's is, it is very much worth writing about. In pursuit of his career, he made impact and his place in the history of epidemiology, community health training and practice is well assured. On one or two occasions in the living room of his University of Ilorin Senior Staff Quarters residence during my teenage years and early adulthood, Professor Awoyemi had joined his children and I to watch a movie or more. That memory remains with me as a prescription for parenting. I am sure such memory does remain with Segun Awoyemi, his siblings and their friends, as practical classes for a small community of youth population.

 

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Gobirawa     Playing Host     Shola Odetundun     Ayo Salami     Cornelius Adebayo     Kwabes     Adekunle David Dunmade     Halimat Yusuf     Abdulrazaq Magaji     Kola Shittu     AbdulRazaq Jiddah     Sheikh Hamzat Yusuf Ariyibi     College Of Education     Mufutau Olatinwo     Kwara State Geographic Information Service     Gani Saadu     Tsaragi     Yusuf Abdulkadir     Abdulrasaq Alaro     Abdulrasheed Akogun     Erubu     Dar-Al-Handasah Consultants     Elesie Of Esie     Kwasu     Kishira     Sheu Ndanusa Usman     Abdulsalam A. Yusuf     Abubakar Olusola Saraki     Sarah Alade     Boko Haram     Hussein Oloyede     Simeon Sayomi     Senior Special Assistant On Student Affairs     Abdullahi Biffo     Mahee Abdulkadir     Segun Ogunsola     Chief Of Staff     Joana Nnazua Kolo     Tosho Yaqub     Yusuf Arowosaye     Omoniyi     Salary     Gbenga Adebayo     Durbar Festival     University Road     Risikat Lawal     Oyedun Juliana Funke     Senior Staff Union Of Colleges Of Education     Nigeria Association Of Women Journalists     Mohammed Saidu     Femtech     Abdulkadir Jimoh     General Hospital, Offa     Dele Belgore     Abdulganiyu AbdulAzeez     Bolaji Abdullahi     KWASSIP     Esinniobiwa Quareeb     Al-Hikmah Radio     Www.Kwarareports.com     Talaka Parapo     Valsolar-Kwara Company Limited     Ojuekun Sarumi     Ilorin Emirate Stakeholders Forum     Mufti Of Ilorin     Budo Egba     Zaratu Umar     KW-GIS     IYA ALFA NLA     Vasolar-Kwara Company Ltd     Abdulraheem Olesin     Oniye     Rebecca Olanrewaju     Musa Ayinla Yeketi     Sobi Hill     ER-KANG     Abdullah Janet Amudat    

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Assayomo     Roheemat Hammed     Abubakar B.M     Saudat Abdulbaqi     Islamic Development Bank     Abdulrazak Shehu Akorede     Yusuf Arowosaye     Salihu S. Yaru     Pategi     Shagari     Mohammed Alabi Lawal     Nigerian Supreme Council For Islamic Affairs     Tosho Yaqub     Halidu Danbaba     Durosinlohun Atiku     Mohammed Ajia Ibrahim     Yahya Mohammed     Bolaji Gambari     Ahmad Olanrewaju Belgore     Saheed Alakoso     Nigeria Association Of Women Journalists     Abdulrasheed Lafia     Ita-Nmo Market     John Olobayo     Rafiu Ajakaye     Age AbdulKareem     Ahmed Shuaib Buranga     Marafan Shonga     Ibrahim Abdulkadir Abikan     Kwara State Internal Revenue Service     Niyi Osundare     Sunday Popo-Ola     Seun Bolaji     Sabo-Oke     KWACOBPA     Just Law Forum     Ubandawaki     Maryam Nurudeen     KWASAA     Towoju     Adamu Atta     Kazeem Gbolagade     Tafida Of Ilorin     Onilupeju Of Ilupeju     Dauda Adeniran Adeshola     Ayodele Kuburat Olaosebikan     CLAY POT     State Bureau Of Internal Revenue     Aliyu Kora-Sabi     Offa Grammer School     General Tunde Idiagbon International Airport Ilorin     John Dara     Kwara 2019     Al-Adaby     Women Radio     Face Masks     Ojo Fadumila     Abdul-Rasheed Na\'Allah     Isiaka Yusuf     Taofik Mustapha     Tunji Folami     Sabi     Senior Special Assistant On Student Affairs     AbdulQowiy Olododo     Aiyedun     Ike Ekweremadu     Mike Omotosho     Kayode Yusuf     Akeem Lawal     Dorcas Afeniforo     Olaitan Buraimoh     Computer Based Test     Ramat Oganija     Mahfouz Adedimeji     Hussein Olokooba     Oba Abu     Gurei