The Departments of Health, Education, Science, Universities and Vocational Training wanted to stipulate this in the Agreement on Decentralization of Medical Teaching in Galicia “They are celebrating the consensus that the three universities have reached and support measures … Contained in this agreement to enable decentralization that would allow the resources of the Galician health system, the talents of its employees and the resources of the three public universities in Galicia to be placed at the service of teaching and research in medicine, with coordinated action that respects at the same time the autonomy of the universities.
After participating in the meeting in which the members of the Council ratified the agreement with the deans of the three universities, the Ministry of Education issued a statement highlighting that both the head of that ministry, Roman Rodriguez, and the head of health, Antonio Gómez Caamaño, had highlighted the agreement on A document “with a vision for the homeland” that is useful to students, in his opinion of this degree and opens new opportunities to achieve high levels of excellence both in the three academic institutions and in the hospitals of Santiago, Vigo and La Coruña.
According to the same statement. All parties agreed on the need to enhance decentralization of the medical degree, “The center with the largest number of newly admitted places in Galicia”, as the best option to take advantage of all the possibilities of both the Galician University System and Cergas when training future doctors.
A positive assessment that is radically different from what was presented by the mayor of Vigo. Socialist Abel Caballero, that in the data collected by Ep, He insisted on Thursday that Vigo “should have” a medical school Especially because it is a ‘cry’ in the city,” he blamed Alfonso Rueda and Alberto Nunez Viejo for this not happening.
“There is no agreement whereby other universities, such as the University of Santiago, teach and carry out their activities in Vigo, are of no use to us,” Caballero noted. Which, as he put it, “is not just a university issue, it is a city issue,” before adding that “They will trick us and laugh at us again.”
The mayor of Vigo believes we are witnessing “exactly the same debate” as when the universities of Vigo and La Coruna were born with “medieval arguments”: “The Xunta de Galicia gives medieval privileges to Santiago.” This was the same expression used last weekend by the mayor of La Coruña, also a socialist, Inés Rey, which prompted the president of Zonta to accuse her of defending her position. “Local” is looking for “electoral revenues.”