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Edemariam Tsega
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    Edemariam Tsega

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    Edemariam Tsega

    እደማርያም ፀጋ
    Edemariam Tsega.jpg
    Born
    Edemariam Tsega Teshale

    (1938-07-07)7 July 1938
    Gondar, Occupied Ethiopia, Italian East Africa
    Died 1 January 2018(2018-01-01) (aged 79)
    Citizenship
    • Ethiopia
    • Canada
    Occupation(s) Physician and educator
    Children 4, including Aida Edemariam
    Awards
    • Order of the Blue Nile
    • Rockefeller Foundation's Research Fellowship
    • Distinguished Scientist Award, AAU
    • Bikila Award
    Academic background
    Education

    Edemariam Tsega (Amharic: እደማርያም ፀጋ; 7 July 1938 – 1 January 2018) was an Ethiopian physician and educator credited with introducing the post-graduate program in internal medicine in Ethiopia.

    Life and career

    Early life and education

    Edemariam Tsega Teshale was born on 7 July 1938, in Gondar, Ethiopia to Aleqa Tsega Teshalé, an Ethiopian Orthodox Church scholar and chief priest (Liqe Kahinat in Amharic) of Begemdir and Simien regions, and Yètèmegnu Mekonnen (1919–2013). He received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1961 from Addis Ababa University and a Doctor of Medicine (MDCM) in 1965 from McGill University. He then travelled to the UK to study and graduate from London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in 1969. Prior to 1971, he underwent a rotating internship in internal medicine, and Gastroenterology rotation training at the Montreal General Hospital.

    Career

    Returning to Ethiopia

    In 1971, Tsega went back to Ethiopia and worked at the Faculty of Medicine at Addis Ababa University (AAU) as a Medical Director and Internist at Leul Mekonnen and Haile Selassie I hospitals. Later, in 1974–91, he became Head of AAU's Department of Internal Medicine, and joined the Faculty of Medicine at AAU in 1972, becoming a full Professor in 1981, making him the first Ethiopian to achieve that.

    During his tenure, Tsega was appointed as Chairman of the Faculty of Medicine Graduate Commission and a member of many committees of AAU and the Ministry of Health. He was the president of the Confederation of African Medical Associations and Societies between 1989 and 1990, and also served as the President of the Ethiopian Medical Association from 1990 to 1993. In 1991, he completed his Doctor of Philosophy in Virology from Lund University, and was awarded a Rockefeller Foundation's Research Fellowship as Visiting Professor at McGill University. He also became a Diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine. Between 1992 and 1994, he was the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, AAU.

    Tsega also had several appointments and memberships to the Ministry of Health of Ethiopia, the Science and Technology Commission of Ethiopia, Ethiopia's Commission for Higher Education, and academic and professional associations.

    For 23 years, Tsega worked as an internist and gastroenterologist conducting clinical research with grants from Swedish Development Cooperation Agency, Department for Research and Addis Ababa University with a focus on viral hepatitis,acute and chronic liver disease. He also taught clinical medicine, endoscopic and laparoscopic to residents students and doctors.

    Tsega is credited with introducing the post-graduate program in Internal Medicine in Ethiopia. He pioneered in Ethiopia's medical education and trained generations of medical professionals in the country. He made significant contributions to the university, including teaching and mentoring medical students and conducting research in hepatology, gastroenterology, and tropical medicine. He also established the Tsega Endowment Fund to support the training of Ethiopian physicians in Internal Medicine at AAU and Ethiopian hospitals.

    Moving to Canada

    After moving to Canada in 1994, Professor Edemariam served as a clinical professor of medicine in the Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, and was later appointed Professor Emeritus of Medicine at the Faculty of Medicine, McMaster University. He worked as a general internist from 1994 until 2001 in Grand Falls-Windsor, Newfoundland, and from 2001 until retirement in 2014 with Hamilton Health Sciences/McMaster University. He visited Ethiopia several times for periods of one month to teach at the Gondar Faculty of Medicine between 1999 and 2008.

    Tsega was also the author of a book titled The Life History & Qineis of Liqe Kahnat Aleqa Tsega Teshale (Tsega's father) in 2018, and a guide to writing medical case reports titled A Guide to Writing Medical Case Reports (Green Book).

    Personal life and death

    Tsega was married in 1972 to Frances Lester, a distinguished doctor herself. Together they had four children, Aida, Naomi, Yohannes and Yodit. His daughter Aida Edemariam, editor and writer at The Guardian, published The Wife's Tale: A Personal History in 2018, which is the story of Tsega's mother, Yètèmegnu.

    Tsega died on 1 January 2018 in Hamilton, Canada. Tsega was described by the Ethiopian Observer as "a light in the darkness" that will be always remembered.

    Awards and honours

    Tsega received several honours and awards throughout his life, including the Distinguished Scientist Award from AAU, the Order of the Blue Nile for scientific achievement from the government of Ethiopia, the President's Award for distinguished services from the Medical Staff Association, the P2P Annual Award in 2004,Hamilton Health Sciences, and the Bikila Award in 2017.

    Tsega was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in 1971, a Fellow of The World Academy of Sciences in 1987, and a Fellow of the African Academy of Sciences in 1988.

    External links


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