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Fatiu Ademola Akesode
Vice chancellor of Lagos State University
In office
February 1997 – 30 March 2001
Personal details
BornApril 1940
Lagos State Nigeria
Died30 March 2001
Political partyNon-Partisan

Fatiu Ademola Akesode (Born, 1940) is a Nigerian professor of paediatrics , educational administrator, and former vice chancellor of Lagos State University Lagos State, Nigeria[1][2].

Education

He was born Lagos Island, Bajulaiye family. He had his primary education at Ansar-Ud-Deen Primary School, Amuto Okepopo and later attended Methodist Boys' High School in 1954 for his secondary education. In 1962, he proceeded to the College of Medicine, University of Lagos. After his first degree in medicine, he obtained a Master of science (M.sc) degree in Public health from Johns Hopkins University in 1968 and a Doctorate (P.hD) degree in paediatrics from Baltimore, Maryland, USA where he bagged the American Heart Foundation Fellowship award in 1973[3][4].

Career

He began his career as a Chief Resident in Paediatrics at Baltimore, Maryland, USA. He later became a lecturer of Public Health at the University of British Columbia, Van Couver B.C Canada in 1978. He left the university for University of Lagos where he lectured as a Senior Lecturer in Pediatrics for five years (1982-1987). He was appointed Professor of Paediatrics on June 1, 1988 at Ogun state university, now Olabisi Onabanjo University. He was later appointed as Chief Medical Director of the Ogun state university teaching hospital, a position he held until his appointment as vice chancellor of the Lagos State University in 1997[5]. He died on 30 march 2001[6][7][8].

Awards and fellowship

  • United States National Institute of Health Research Award in Paediatrics(1975-1976).
  • Fellow of the Nigerian Medical College (Public Health) (1978)
  • Fellow of the West African College of Physicians (1980)
  • World Health Organization, WHO Research Award on Breast-Feeding (1988-93)
  • British Overseas Development Agency Award for the study of Sexually Transmitted Diseases (1996)

References

See also