YOGYAKARTA,
Indonesia — Indonesia’s UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta is moving to establish a
Faculty of Medicine as the country faces a deepening shortage of doctors and
mounting pressure from a rapidly aging population, university officials said.
The Islamic
state university held a two-day academic consolidation on Jan. 16–17 to align
prospective faculty members, curriculum priorities and infrastructure ahead of
a formal external assessment, part of a national drive to expand medical
education capacity.
Vice Rector
for Academic Affairs Istiningsih said preparations covering staffing,
curriculum design and core facilities had been completed through phased
institutional planning, positioning the university for the evaluation process.
Rector
Noorhaidi Hasan linked the initiative to President Prabowo Subianto’s call to
accelerate the establishment of medical faculties to address uneven access to
health services, particularly outside major urban centers.
Demographic
pressure is a central driver. In Yogyakarta, residents aged 60 and above
account for about 16% of the population, compared with a national average of
roughly 12%, government data show, increasing demand for long-term and
preventive health care.
University
officials said the proposed faculty would emphasize promotive and preventive
medicine, with a focus on geriatric and musculoskeletal health. Clinical
neurologist Yudiyanta and geriatric specialist Probosuseno outlined academic
frameworks aimed at strengthening early intervention and elderly care.
The
university also inspected lecture halls, offices and laboratories across core
medical disciplines as part of its readiness review.
If approved,
the faculty would expand UIN Sunan Kalijaga’s role in Indonesia’s health
system, integrating medical training with ethical and social perspectives
rooted in its Islamic academic tradition.