Tema Medical Journal relaunched

By Isaac Ato MENSAH

Tema- 26 July, 2018.

 

Tema Medical Journal (TMJ), a world-class peer reviewed research journal has been relaunched in Tema.

At the meeting with the editorial committee on 25 July, during which the announcement was made, Dr Edward Narh, president of Narh-Bita College and medical director of Narh-Bita Hospital, said the reason for the relaunch was to make the TMJ owned and shared by more people.

The TMJ accepts health-related articles on nursing, medicine, education, the environment, surgery, sports, health and social policy, transportation, architecture, human resource policies, and medical insurance among others.

Every issue of the TMJ features an article devoted to a special personality, community or institution that has made a significant contribution to healthcare.

The Tema Medical Journal was instituted by Narh-Bita College and Narh-Bita Hospital but has an autonomous management.

“Our main aim is to document significant contributions to health care,” said Dr Narh. “Even if you’re a human resource lecturer who specialises  in workplace policies which impact healthcare or an architect handling hospital architecture, you can contribute. You don’t need medical training to be part of the journal. Lawyers could also share health-related case studies in the journal.”

At the relaunch, Writers and Shakespeares Ghana Limited, an integrated communications firm located in South La Estates, Accra, was engaged to promote the TMJ globally and get persons from all walks of life to contribute articles.

The TMJ was instituted in 2011 initially for Narh-Bita College and Narh-Bita Hospital staff only, but has now been relaunched and made available to the general public.

The editor-in-chief, Dr Nii Bonney Andrews, an internationally renowned neurosurgeon, believes the Ghanaian “oral culture and our educational system” is the reason why many professionals cannot write, hence the “need to engage Writers and Shakespeares Ghana Limited to help prospective contributors” to produce articles.

Contributors are expected to write a maximum of 2000 words with not more than 25 references.

Volume 2, issue no. 1, published May 2012, featured Professor Yaw Asirifi, Ghana’s first pediatrician.

Who doesn’t need a child doctor?

Prof Asirifi died last month without any national award,  but thankfully the TMJ documented his work!

In that article, he even spoke on the current debate on Free Senior High School and the kind of school education Ghanaian children need.

Maybe, just maybe, thinking of the lack of national recognition for someone who served his country with distinction- in Ho, Kpedze, Vane, Ziope, Peki, Anum Boso and Akyem Oda in the 1950s and early 60s, was sent on a military service to DR Congo in 1960 when the Belgian doctors returned home, was appointed first head of the pediatrics department of the University of Ghana Medical School, Korlebu, when it was established in 1965- but did not receive any national award, may inspire you to write!

Prospective writers and contributors who need editorial assistance may kindly contact the editor-in-chief through

[email protected] or [email protected].

 

 

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