SUBSCRIBE NOW
SUBSCRIBE NOW

UP Manila offers forensic medicine masteral program

The University of the Philippines Manila launches the Master in Forensic Medicine degree program in a recent symposium led by academic experts from the institution’s forensic sciences and counterparts from Australia’s Monash University.
The University of the Philippines Manila launches the Master in Forensic Medicine degree program in a recent symposium led by academic experts from the institution’s forensic sciences and counterparts from Australia’s Monash University. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES MANILA
Published on

The University of the Philippines (UP) Manila announced it will begin offering its Forensic Master’s Program in the next academic year, focusing on a systematic approach to victim identification during disasters.

Experts from Australia’s Monash University and UP Manila’s College of Medicine jointly developed the curriculum for the new master’s program after signing a memorandum of agreement in October last year.

The new postgraduate degree integrates existing forensic medicine courses from Monash University that were tailored to the Philippine context to address the country’s distinct forensic challenges.

“We’re conducting the training here in the Philippines and we’ll be sending forensic doctors from Australia and other countries around the world,” said Dr. Richard Bassed, deputy director and head of the Academic Programs of the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine and head of the Department of Forensic Medicine of Monash University.

“We’ll spend a month at a time here supervising and training the students as they go through the master’s program and this program will deliver that to the Filipino doctors for the Philippine society in the hope that we can generate a death investigation pathway or system that provides independent and evidence-based reports and testimony to courts for the satisfaction of justice,” he added.

Meantime, Dr. Stephen Cordner, Professor Emeritus of the Department of Forensic Medicine of Monash University, meanwhile, stressed how forensic medicine could improve the country’s justice system and public safety by enhancing death investigations through accurate identification and evaluation of persons supposedly involved in crimes.

There are only two trained forensic pathologists in the country, Dr. Raquel Fortun and Dr. Cecilia Lim, with the former set to retire next year.

The new postgraduate training assures the availability of experts who can help in disaster operations, particularly in the identification of bodies and in conducting criminal investigations, according to UP Manila.

Fortun said she considers the upcoming course as an important milestone not just for UP Manila but for the justice system in the country.

“Once upon a time, we gave the Forensic Science Institute a move… but it never really took off,” Fortun said. “The stars have aligned. Now, we have support from the Office of the President.”

On 22 January, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed an administrative order creating a technical working group for the establishment of a National Forensics Institute, with experts from UP Manila playing a key role.

This initiative underscores the government’s recognition of the crucial role forensic medicine plays in the country’s justice system and public health.

Latest Stories

No stories found.
logo
Daily Tribune
tribune.net.ph