11
Apr

Is there a mass exodus of doctors from Burma?

The [him] moderator knows that he must give the new DG of the World Health Organization a chance to prove herself as she is new to the post. But why this sudden concern about the number of health workers in villages in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar?

Vietnam trains too many doctors and almost all villages have one or two. Myanmar trains enough physicians for the country and there is not a massive exodus of doctors out of the country. Only two have left the Ministry of Health for other countries in ten years!

Comments?

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WHO chief: Nations must train medical workers
April 3rd, 2007
SINGAPORE -- At least four million health care professionals are urgently needed around the world, with especially dire shortfalls in AIDS-ravaged parts of Africa, the head of the World Health Organization said Tuesday, urging nations to train more workers.

WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said the labor crisis was most severe in sub-Saharan Africa, which accounts for 24 percent of the global burden of diseases but has only three percent of the health work force.

"WHO estimates four million health workers are urgently needed to maintain essential care in 57 countries," Chan told fellow medical colleagues at a lecture at the National University of Singapore.

Chan, a former health secretary in Hong Kong, said WHO member nations needed to work with "institutes of higher education to provide relevant training of the next generation of the work force."

Another problem brought by globalization is the vast numbers of skilled health workers leaving the countries that invested in their training, she said.

"Some powerful countries have gone to Third World countries to recruit their doctors and nurses," Chan said.

Several countries, including the United States and Singapore, have begun employing foreign doctors and nurses from the Philippines, India and Pakistan in recent years.

She acknowledged that few medical professionals are willing to stay and work in developing countries when pay and employment conditions are so much better elsewhere.

"We need to rethink how can we train enough people who would stay in villages to help villages in Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar," Chan said.

Chan was in Singapore for a three-day visit ahead of World Health Day, April 7.

( www.inquirer.net )

Developing world has acute shortage of health workers: WHO
Tue Apr 3, 2007 7:09AM EDT

By Koh Gui Qing

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Developing countries are suffering from an acute shortage of doctors and nurses, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday, appealing for more health services for the poor.

WHO's Margaret Chan said the shortage of health workers has jeopardized essential services such as immunization for children, care during pregnancy and childbirth, as well as treatments for HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria. "Globalization of the labor market has contributed to an acute shortage of health workers," said Chan, who was speaking in Singapore ahead of World Health Day on April 7. "The crisis is most severe in sub-Saharan Africa."

Thousands of doctors, nurses, and pharmacists from developing countries have emigrated to wealthier western nations with ageing populations in search of better-paid jobs -- a trend that many health experts consider a crippling brain drain for their home countries.

Warning about a growing rich-poor gap in terms of health services, Chan said that the health-care needs of poorer nations are also being overlooked by medical research and development (R&D), which is geared towards the rich.

"Huge gaps in health outcomes are growing wider, and these gaps divide rather precisely along the lines of poverty and wealth," she said. "Health needs in populations left behind by socio-economic progress are also left behind by the R&D agenda."

For instance, only a single class of broadly effective drugs is available for malaria even though developing countries report between 300-500 million cases each year, with an annual death toll of more than 1 million, Chan said.

WORK IN VILLAGES

More than 4 million more health professionals are urgently needed in 57 countries -- mostly in Africa and rural areas of Asia -- the United Nations said in its annual World Health Report 2006.

Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for about a quarter of the global disease burden, but has only 3 percent of the health workforce, according to WHO.

Ethiopia, for instance, has 21 nurses per 100,000 people, while the United States has 900 nurses per 100,000 people.

Chan said the medical sector needs to re-think its training of health-care workers so that more of them are willing to work in villages in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar.

"Fully-qualified doctors, nurses and pharmacists, we should not criticize them for looking for better opportunities in different places. It's their freedom," she said.

Currently, doctors in villages in Liberia in West Africa earn as little as $15 a month. Many end up working for non-government organizations or try to get out of the country, according to an aid worker familiar with the situation there.

(Additional reporting by Tan Ee Lyn in Hong Kong)
(c) Reuters 2006. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.
Reuters journalists are subject to the Reuters Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

Comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    One National AIDS Programme Manager and one other person who worked at the central MoH have permanently left their positions. If any others have left please let the moderator know. No names, please.

  2. Anonymous says:

    I agreed that there is enough doctors in Myanmar and there is no mass exodus of them. But I don't agree that only 2 physicians left MOH in ten years. May be I am wrong. Please elaborate more.

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