May 1, 2018
The West African College of Surgeons (WACS) started as an association in 1960, with a membership of 25 surgeons.* According to Ajayi and co-authors in Knife in Hand: History of the West African College of Surgeons, the end of World War II resulted in a wave of disentanglement from colonial vestiges in Africa, Asia, and around the world.† This decolonization resulted in a need to focus on the surgical needs of these newly independent countries. It was in this environment that Victor Anomah Ngu, MD, FWACS, a 33-year-old Cameroon-born, English-trained surgeon, met an Irish surgeon, Charles Bowesman, MD, on a ship heading to Nigeria from the U.K. Both men identified the need for a forum of practicing surgeons in West Africa to exchange ideas and share experiences. Letters of invitation were sent to known individuals and Ministries of Health of all West African countries, describing the formation of the Association of Surgeons of West Africa (ASWA) and announcing the inaugural meeting on December 3, 1960, in Ibadan, Nigeria. This organization eventually transformed into a College in 1973 to address the growing demand for surgical specialists in the region, as it had become obvious that the cost of overseas training was unsustainable.
The WACS membership now consists of more than 6,000 Fellows in seven surgical specialities, from 18 countries in West Africa (see map below for a visual representation of the West Africa sub-region). The mission of the WACS is to promote postgraduate professional surgical education, disseminating surgical knowledge and technical skills toward the attainment of the highest possible standards, with the overall goal of protecting the health of the peoples of West Africa, through cooperation among member countries.
Figure 1. West Africa sub-region
The WACS now has more than 220 accredited surgical training programs in 120 institutions, and between 4,000 and 5,000 trainees sit for examinations annually. In 2017, the WACS examined the first post-fellows in trauma care within the faculty of surgery.
The main objectives of the WACS include the following:
Although the mission of the WACS is broad, the core has always been training skilled surgical specialists to provide surgical services to the population of member countries. In its 57 years of existence, the WACS has made significant strides in achieving its objectives, including middle-level workforce training, endowment funding, and professional development.
In response to the immense need for surgical services, the WACS in the late 1980s introduced diplomate programs in anesthesia, ophthalmology, and otorhinolaryngology. Approximately 1,000 physicians have been trained so far under this model.
Today, the WACS has introduced the membership program as an exit platform to serve workforce needs of the sub-region and fast-track capacity building. There is a mandatory supervised rural surgery posting for membership level trainees, intended to scale up rural surgical services and improve trainee retention in the rural district and rural hospitals that serve the bulk of the population in West Africa.
Introduced in 1990, the endowment fund program was designed to help meet the needs of local surgical training programs for the enhancement of surgical practice for community health care facilities (district and general hospitals) in member countries. All member countries have such funds, which are used under the direction of a board of trustees to fund locally identified relevant surgical training or programs. The endowment fund in each constituent country is re-launched each time the WACS Scientific and Annual Conference is held in that country.
As part of its mission to update surgical knowledge and skills, the WACS organizes regional courses and workshops during the year using local, regional, and international faculty. These workshops are well-attended and some are mandatory for trainee eligibility to sit for examinations. These courses include the following:
Most of the functions of the WACS are already in tandem with the resolutions of the World Health Organization’s World Health Assembly (WHA). Examples of WACS programs that directly address the WHA resolutions include the following:
Despite significant strides, much more work is necessary to achieve the goals of the organization. Surgical workforce density is extremely low, and with a population of 300–350 million in the sub-region, West Africa is far below the minimum of 20 specialist surgeons, anesthesiologists, and obstetricians per 100,000 recommended by The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery.
In addition to these workforce shortages, rapid population expansion and frequent disease outbreaks in the sub-region increase the burden for existing health care providers and highlight the need for a larger, more robust surgical workforce. The following areas are ripe for collaboration with our international partners:
It is our hope that our sister colleges in North America and Europe will find value in working with the WACS to accomplish these goals.
*West African College of Surgeons. Available at: www.wacscoac.org/. Accessed March 9, 2018.
†Ajayi OO, Quartey JKM, Adebonojo SA, editors. Knife in Hand: History of the West African College of the Surgeons (1960–2010). Ibadan, Nigeria: BookBuilders. Editions Africa; 2010.