Healthcare reforms

Published June 28, 2024 Updated June 28, 2024 09:00am

PAKISTAN is a struggling nation. The country spends billions of rupees on the education of medical students in public-sector universities. But they either opt to move abroad for greener pastures or remain out of the healthcare labour force.

According to the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PMDC), the country has produced 200,000 doctors since the independence. The data from the Bureau of Emigration and Overseas Employment shows that 30,000 doctors have left Pakistan since 1970. On an average, 1,000 doctors settle abroad every year. As per the Labour Force Survey 2020-21 by Gallup, 36,000 female doctors are either jobless or have chosen not to serve.

Many of the doctors usually switch to other professions, such as civil services, after getting heavily subsidised medical education. The government provides Rs4 million subsidy to each medical student in the public sector. In return, they opt not to serve or even pay back.

In Pakistan, the doctor-patient ratio is 1:1,300, while the minimum suggested by the World Health Organisation (WHO) for developing nations is 1:1,000. Considering this scenario, people are bound to suffer.

To change this trend, it is suggested that the government should introduce compulsory service for the doctors who study in public-sector institutions. After one year of house job, they should be contracted to at least serve for three to four years so that they at least pay back what the country has spent on them to make them doctors.

Almost every government-run medical education institution has an attached teaching hospital. The graduates can serve there or in a nearby hospital depending on the policy designed by the government. This initiative will improve the poor doctor-patient ratio in the country and help improve the ailing healthcare sector. Moreover, it will give doctors professional experience, and will reduce their known aversion to serving in public hospitals.

Muhammad Mohtasim
Mandi Bahauddin

Published in Dawn, June 28th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Burdening the people
Updated 30 Jun, 2024

Burdening the people

The tax-heavy budget will make lives of avg Pakistanis even harder and falls far short of inspiring confidence in govt's ability to execute structural changes.
WikiLeaks’ legacy
30 Jun, 2024

WikiLeaks’ legacy

THE recent release from captivity of WikiLeaks’ founder Julian Assange has presented an opportunity to revisit the...
Iranian run-off
30 Jun, 2024

Iranian run-off

FRIDAY’S snap presidential election in Iran, called after the shock deaths of Ebrahim Raisi and members of his...
Pension burden
Updated 29 Jun, 2024

Pension burden

The cost of inaction has been enormous; the national pension bill has risen 50 times during the last 20 years.
‘Hot pursuit’
29 Jun, 2024

‘Hot pursuit’

WHILE Pakistan faces a major problem in the form of terrorists from Afghanistan infiltrating the country,...
Of fatal flaws
29 Jun, 2024

Of fatal flaws

IT is remarkable how chaos seems to be the only constant with the PTI. Late on Thursday, it emerged that the...