Universiti Malaya Medical Centre
It serves as the teaching hospital for the Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Malaya and is the largest and oldest teaching hospital in Malaysia. The UMMC is also the second largest hospital in Malaysia.
History
Shortly after the end of the second World War, a commission was established under the Chairmanship of Sir Alexander Carr-Saunders to enquire into and make recommendations concerning university education in Malaya (Malaysia). The Commission arrived in March 1947, and after an intensive study recommended that the King Edward VII College of Medicine and Raffles College be almagated forthwith to form a Universiti Malaya. Accordingly, the Universiti Malaya was established in Singapore on 8 October 1949 as a national institution to serve the higher educational needs of the Federation of Malaya and of Singapore.
In 1957, a Commission of Enquiry was set up by the Governments of the Federation and of Singapore at the request of the Universiti Malaya to review the constitution, working and finances of the University in the light of the experience and rapid expansion of last seven years and of the prospective expansion in the near future, including the plan for developing the University in Kuala Lumpur, and to make recommendation. Arising from the commission's Report and that of a Joint Constitutional Committee appointed by the two Governments, legislation was passed in November 1958 providing for the continuance of the UM as a single University, but with two largely autonomous divisions of equal status, one in each territory. This legislation came into effect in January 1958.
In 1960 the Government of the Federation of Malaya indicated that the Kuala Lumpur Division of the Universiti Malaya should become the national University in the Federation with effect from the beginning of the session 1962/63, and likewise the Singapore Government indicated that the Singapore Division should become the National University of Singapore. Steps to achieve the establishment of these two separate Universities were finalised during the year 1961 and the Universiti Malaya was established on 1 January 1962.
The Universiti Malaya is situated on a site of about 750 acres of land in Pantai Valley on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.
The University Hospital, a brief introduction
Although the main hospital building was completed by December 1966, commissioning of the hospital and opening of the wards proceeded slowly mainly because of a shortage of nursing staff. The first patients were admitted in March 1967 and before the end of the year several wards had been opened together with the Polyclinic and Accident and Emergency Unit thus making available to the residents of Petaling Jaya and the adjoining area of Petaling Jaya and the adjoining area of Kuala Lumpur a hospital service on a 24-hour basis. By the end of 1969, all 758 beds were available for use. A new ward block of 112 bed was constructed in 1974 and commissioned providing for a total of 870 beds for the University Hospital.
Currently known as Universiti Malaya Medical Centre, it has 1,617 beds which is distributed by 44 wards throughout the medical centre serving the district of Petaling.
The Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Malaya was the first school that was instituted at UM in 1905 following the Education Commission report that the colonial region in Southeast Asia needed to address the shortage of medical assistants in the large cities of Singapore and Penang. This was after the first unsuccessful initial attempt to establish a medical school to train assistant surgeons in 1889. Back then; when the country was under the rule of the British Empire, such a view that a European system of medical school is to established in a colony state was not particularly favoured among the European community and therefore there were several obstacles to be overcome before the school could be established. However, despite the odds, in June 1905, under the Straits Legislative Council of Malaya, legislation of the establishment of a medical college in Singapore was passed under the Ordinance No. XV 1905. Following public appeal for funds, the school opened on 3 July 1905 but only started its courses in September the same year. On 28 September 1905, Sir John Anderson officiated the school under the name "The Straits and Federal Malay States Government Medical School". With the division of the university into two autonomous campuses in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore in 1959, and the passing of the legislation in 1961 by both governments of Malaya and Singapore to make UM a national university, Universiti Malaya became permanently located in Kuala Lumpur as of 1 January 1962. With this came the new teaching and research facility and its own 500-bed hospital. The Singapore Division was renamed the University of Singapore.
The term "Medical Centre" was first used in 1963 to refer to "the whole Medical Centre complex composed of the departments of the Faculty of Medicine, the Teaching Hospital and the ancillary services attached to them". That was the definition used in the Hospital Act XXII of 1965, Statute XXVIII (The University Hospital) of 1967 and Statute XXXVI (The University Hospital) of 1971. It was also used in Statute XV New Series (The University Hospital) of 1977 which was amended by Statute XX (NewSeries) consequent to the 1975 amendments (A295) to the Universities and University Colleges Act (A30) [or "UUCA].
Although the Faculty of Medicine was established by Statute in 1962, planning, design and construction of the entire Medical Centre project only began actively from 1 February 1963 when Dr. T.J. Danaraj assumed duty as the first Professor of Medicine and the Foundation Dean of Medicine. The first batch of Pre-Medical students were admitted in May 1963 and were taught in the Faculty of Science. Teaching of the Pre-Clinical Year began for the first time in May 1964 in the Faculty of Medicine premises. The Faculty was officially opened on 2 August 1965 by YAB Tun Abdul Razak bin Dato Hussien, The Deputy Prime Minister, who also laid the Foundation Stone of the University Hospital on the same day. The University Hospital admitted its first patients in March 1967. His Majesty the Yang Dipertuan Agung, Duli Yang Maha Mulia, Seri Paduka Baginda, Tuanku Ismail Nasarudin, Shah Ibni Alharmahum and Sultan Zainal Abidin opened the University Hospital (which was later officially known as the Universiti Malaya Medical Centre sometime in the 1990s) on 5 August 1968 when Dr. J.H.E. Griffiths, Professor Danaraj and Lim Chung Tat were officiated as the Vice-Chancellor, The Dean of Medicine and the Registrar respectively. Today, UMMC stands as a statutory body under The Ministry of Higher Education, Malaysia. The main objectives of UMMC are health services, learning and research, serving as the primary teaching hospital of the Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Malaya.
Directors
- Emeritus Professor Tan Sri Datuk T.J. Danaraj (1962 ~ 1972)
- Dr. Haji Abbas bin Haji Alias (1973 ~ 31 May 1981)
- Datuk Dr. Hussain bin Abdul Ghani (1 June 1981 ~ February 1983)
- Dato' Dr. Abdul Talib bin Latiff (April 1983 ~ December 1984)
- Dato’ Dr. Gurmukh Singh (1 January 1985 ~ 10 July 1991)
- Brigadier General Dato' Dr. Samsudin bin Hussain (December 1991 ~ 16 June 1996)
- Prof. Dato' Dr. Anuar Zaini bin Md Zain (August 1998 ~ 18 June 2000)
- Prof. Tan Sri Mohd Amin bin Jalaludin (19 June 2000 ~ July 2006)
- Prof. Dato' Dr. Ikram Shah bin Ismail (1 September 2006 ~ 31 July 2015)
- Prof. Dr. Tunku Kamarul Zaman bin Tunku Zainol Abidin (12 August 2015 ~ 11 August 2020)
- Prof. Dr. Nazirah binti Hasnan (2 November 2020 ~ Present)
See also
References
- ^ "Official Portal University Malaya Medical Centre". ummc.edu.my. Retrieved 17 March 2016.
- ^ humans.txt. "Welcome to University of Malaya". um.edu.my. Retrieved 17 March 2016.
- ^ Danaraj, T.J (1975). The Report of Establishment and Progress of the Faculty of Medicine. University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur: Central Printing Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya. pp. 1–6, 32–35.
- ^ Chung Tat, Lim (2013). University of Malaya 1949 to 1985, Its Establishment, Growth and Development. Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya Press. pp. 138–139. ISBN 978-983-100-580-4.