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He also served as the vice president and censor in public health medicine at the Hong Kong College of Community Medicine from 2006 to 2008. [1] In 2008, Leung left academia and joined the Government of Hong Kong as the first undersecretary for food and health, [25] during which he led the government's response in the 2009 swine flu H1N1 pandemic.
Applicants must be of P.R. China nationality, including citizenship of the Special Administrative Region of China - Hong Kong [7] [8] and Macao. Applicants must not have received any financial support from the Chinese government, such as the CSC scholarship, during their studies. Applicants must not have received this award previously.
Under Hong Kong law, there are 22 accredited degree-awarding higher education institutions in Hong Kong. [1] The following is a list. Only the first three categories of higher education are eligible to award bachelor's degrees or above in Hong Kong.
Established The Li Ka Shing Foundation Lord Sandberg Memorial Scholarship for Hong Kong students in memory of Lord Michael Sandberg of Passfield in King's College London (United Kingdom). [ 46 ] Sponsoring the Future Now excursion to Australia for an experimental education and exchange program—September 2019.
The University Grants Committee of Hong Kong is a non-statutory advisory committee responsible for counselling the Government of Hong Kong on the financing and expansion needs of its subsidised higher education institutions.
The HKU Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine [a] (branded as HKUMed) is the medical school of the University of Hong Kong (HKU), a public research university. It was founded in 1887 as the Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese, one of the oldest western medical schools in the Asia–Pacific region, and which served as the base for HKU's founding in 1910.
The initial funding for this program was provided by the Hong Kong–based Li Ka Shing Foundation (李嘉诚基金会), with the goal of elevating research at Chinese universities to the highest levels internationally. [10] [11] The program began in August 1998.
The Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese (Chinese: 香港華人西醫書院) was founded in 1887 by the London Missionary Society, with its first graduate (in 1892) being Sun Yat-sen.