Health Sciences Continues its Qualification Week
PUA’s Faculty of Applied Health Sciences Technology continued the activities of the second and third days of the Field Training Qualification Week for the 2025-2026 academic year, amid a large student turnout. This event activates PUA’s vision aimed at preparing its students optimally prior to engaging in clinical and practical training, establishing an integrated educational ecosystem that skillfully merges academic and skill qualification. This week represents a core pillar within PUA’s Field Training Center (FTC) plans to elevate student readiness and qualify them logistically to handle the active challenges and risks of real-world medical environments.
The activities of the second and third days witnessed broad participation and a distinguished presence of experts and representatives from six of the largest medical strongholds and leading hospitals in Alexandria, aiming to equip future specialists with newly applied medical and technological protocols. The partner medical institutions included Mostafa Kamel Military Hospital, El-Anfoushy General Hospital (Navy General Hospital), the Italian Hospital, alongside Ayadi Al-Mostakbal Oncology Hospital, Zamzam Hospital, and Alexandria University Hospitals. This partnership offered a rich training and discussion platform during which officials reviewed operation mechanisms of modern medical equipment, quality and infection control standards, and health management systems across laboratories, radiology, and intensive care units.
The intensive workshops aimed to refine the technical and soft skills of the student body, particularly patient-communication and medical-teamwork skills, alongside understanding professional practice ethics and the specialist’s legal responsibilities. The faculty administration emphasized that continuous integration and coordination with these major medical facilities serve as the most effective path to fully bridge the gap between theoretical academic studies and actual health sector requirements, ensuring the graduation of health technologists who possess competitive advantages and the capacity to contribute positively to developing the healthcare system locally and regionally with merit.










