Nigerian medics reportedly constitute 3.9% of the 137,000 foreign staff in the UK National Health Service working alongside British doctors and nurses. |
There is anxiety over
Nigerian doctors leaving town en masse. According to a recent report, Saudi
Arabian officials interviewed in Abuja more than 200 medical personnel seeking
placements in the Gulf nation.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
Observers
have acknowledged that Nigeria does not have enough doctors to meet the need of
its population. Yet,
they are unable to comprehend why trainee doctors find it hard to get places to
do internship.
Figures
released February 2018 by the British government indicate that no fewer than
5,405 Nigerian-trained doctors and nurses are currently working with the
British National Health Service (NHS) in the United Kingdom (U.K.).
This
means that Nigerian medics constitute 3.9% of the 137,000 foreign staff of 202
nationalities working alongside British doctors and nurses.
The
Guardian (Nigeria) investigation revealed that more Nigerian doctors would join their
colleagues soon. The U.K. has need for medics from Commonwealth countries,
since some doctors in the European Union (E.U.) are already leaving on account
of Brexit.
It
was gathered that many Nigerian doctors and nurses are leaving for the U.K.
because of better conditions of service.
An
unconfirmed report earlier in the year claimed “over 100 doctors have resigned
from University College Hospital, Ibadan, this year and 100 from public
hospitals in Lagos this month alone.
Similarly, “70% of young Nigerian Doctors are making plans to leave for foreign lands and
are taking exams to that effect.”
Reports
claim that 660 persons wrote the Professional Linguistic Assessments Board
(PLAB) exams, recently, and over 1000 have registered for the next PLAB exam. The
British Council administers the PLAB exams on behalf of the United Kingdom’s
(UK’s) General Medical Council. The
PLAB test is the main route by which international medical graduates
demonstrate that they have the necessary skills and knowledge to practice
medicine in the U.K.
The
PLAB examinations are now being conducted in Nigeria, with other countries coming
around to conduct interviews and lure away our dispirited doctors.
A
Consultant Urological Surgeon with the University of Benin School of Medicine
and Teaching Hospital, Dr. Samuel Osaghae, and a Consultant Neurological
Surgeon, Brain and Spine Surgery Consortium, Abuja, Dr. Biodun Ogungbo,
recently, lamented the absence of robust practice environment to keep doctors
within the shores of the country.
Figures
from the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) showed that about 45,000 doctors
are currently practicing in Nigeria.
This
means that 12% of 45,000 Nigerian doctors, that is 5,405, are practising in the
U.K. and the country is now left with less than 40,000, excluding those
practising in the U.S., South Africa, Saudi Arabia and others.
NMA
President, Dr. Mike Ogirima, described the exodus as worrisome. He said the trend
has worsened the doctor-patient ratio of 1:4,000, caused longer waiting time at
hospitals, rise in fatal disease outcomes, and more frequent medical errors by
over worked doctors.
“Nigeria
is using her resources to train doctors and professionals that will leave to
work in foreign countries. What are those things attracting these professionals
outside? Can we duplicate them here?” asked Ogirima.
Consultant
Public Health Physician, Prof. Akin Osibogun, however, said the situation could
be reversed if the Federal Government makes the National Insurance Scheme
(NHIS) compulsory for all citizens.
According
to him, this would provide enough funds to improve the conditions of service
and working environment for health professionals.
He
said: “The few ones we have are leaving because of poor conditions of service,
working environment and after service package.
It
means the physician-patient ratio has worsened, maybe from 1:3,000 to 1:5,000.
When you compare, those countries that have better physician-patient ratio have
better treatment outcomes.”
Osibogun,
a former Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital
(LUTH), said Nigeria currently produces about 3,000 medical doctors every year
and needs to increase the ratio by producing more, and developing plans on how
to retain them.
He
explained: “We need to make working conditions attractive. If they know they
will have a house after 20 years of training, the lure to leave would be
reduced. What are the benefits attached to the job?
What
are the provisions for the doctors’ family? What are the long-term prospects
for the staff?
“We
need to improve the work environment in terms of financing. Make it
work-friendly, not crowding 10 persons in one office.
Talk
about electricity supply; you come to work and you are scheduled to do a
surgery but there is no electricity.
We
need to be more drastic; re-organizing the way we fund health service. There
should be compulsory NHIS that will bring a pool of funds. We have to adopt a
more holistic approach.”
The
situation is not hopeless said consultant paediatric surgeon and current CMD of
LUTH, Prof. Chris Bode. He said the high migration of Nigerian doctors to the
U.K. is because some doctors in E.U. countries are leaving because of Brexit
and the NHS has opened its gates to doctors from Commonwealth countries.
He,
however, stressed that Nigeria needs proper planning to harness the opportunity
the situation brings. He said: “A medical degree is an international passport.
Because of global competition, many doctors are moving to the U.S. and U.K.
We
lose because we trained them. But we also learn from them by getting exposed to
cutting-edge technologies. One day, if we harness them, they will come back to
impact positively on the practice here.
“That
is the method Japan, India and China used in adapting what they learnt in the
U.S. and U.K. It is not a total loss. We are seeing a lot of movement of
medical doctors abroad. It is not as if Nigerian medicine is dead.
I
had to spend a lot, US$14,000, some years back in going to Israel to learn new
skills. That has distinguished me, and Nigerians are benefitting.
“Nigerian
doctors are going to the U.K. because they have opened their gates. By the time
the medical doctors come back, we will be better for it. It is not a hopeless
situation. There is a lot we can do to harness the opportunity. We need proper
planning.”
Medical
Director, Optimal Specialist Hospital Surulere, Lagos, Dr. Celestine Ugochukwu
Chukwunenye, said solving the problem of brain drain is not like analysing the
amino acid sequence of protein in the leg of a mosquito.
He
said government must take the health sector out of the realm of politics and
the public sector, and that each health facility should have its own governing
board virtually free of ministerial control.
The
consultant gynaecologist said the National Assembly should approve subsidies
for Teaching Hospitals based on verifiable criteria of performance. He
explained: “The Federal Medical Centres should be handed over to the states.
Each
Teaching Hospital should then be allowed to float or sink. Their governing
boards should reflect the interest of their catchment area and appropriate
pricing of their services in line with available government subsidies.”
Chukwunenye
said the NHIS must be strengthened to provide better access to these
facilities. According to him, it is a ruse to think that forcing the teaching
hospitals to charge fees like Primary Health Centres (PHCs) is the way to
improve access to them.
Former
President, NMA, and Vice President Commonwealth Medical Association (CWMA), Dr.
Osahon Enabulele, recommended: “Better political commitment to health; better
appreciation of the worth of medical personnel, along with better and
competitive wages/remuneration; better working conditions and inspiring work
environment; better security and access to social amenities; attractive and
globally respected postgraduate training programmes.”
Furthermore,
former Minister of State for Health and Executive Director Primary Health Care
Development Agency (NPHCDA), Dr. Muhammad Ali Pate, said the causes of medical
doctors trooping abroad for greener pastures are poor governance, financing and
accountability within the system.
Pate
is currently the Chief Executive Officer of Big Win Philanthropy and an Adjunct
Professor of Global Health, Duke University Global Health Institute. He is also
a member of the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts.
Pate
told The Guardian: “Nigerian health professionals are among the best anywhere
in the world. In the course of my work, I have encountered compatriots in far
away places like Australia and the Solomon Islands, in Africa as well as Europe
and North America. Wherever Nigerian health professionals go, they excel.
“Thus
the big question of why they don’t stay at home and equally excel. I believe we
can find the answer by examining the worldview, structure and functioning of
the Nigerian health system. The reality is that our national health system,
despite some recent progress, has many areas that are long overdue for
significant reforms.
“We
have a mixed health system where both the private and public parts are
underperforming. At the root of the problem are leadership, governance,
financing and accountability. Private health sector will continue to struggle
until we have a substantially improved third party payer for health services.”
Pate
said until quality standards are outlined and health workers are enabled to
reach those higher care standards, both patients and providers will continue to
be disappointed.
He
said political leaders, who pay lip service to health care, fail to do the
necessary when budget allocations for health are discussed. Instead, they leave
for the health systems of better-financed countries, to seek care for
themselves and their families.
“If
political leaders, who control the public purse, continue to choose to travel
abroad for medical care, it is a signal for domestic health workers that they,
too, ought to travel abroad in order to practice and advance themselves
professionally. We cannot have one without the other,” Pate added.
Medical
Director and Chief Executive Officer, Beaconhill Smile Clinics, Dr. Oluwaseun
Akinbobola, said though the trend occurs all over the world because of the
global nature of the medical profession, the rate in Nigeria is alarming.
He
pointed fingers at government’s neglect of medical personnel, and poor and
irregular salaries that often result in strike actions. Other reasons, he said,
include lack of investment in medical equipment and infrastructure, inadequate
security, and disrespect for medical professionals in the country.
On
ways to reverse the trend, Akinbobola said: “The leadership of the country must
instill confidence in and show willingness to improve healthcare services by
signing necessary health acts and bills, increasing funding for the sector and
ensuring that funds are properly managed.”
He
expressed disappointment that “healthcare is not a priority in our nation, as
most decision makers would rather travel abroad when the need arises. Until we prioritize
healthcare, I don’t believe this dramatic exodus of doctors will end. You
cannot fix a health system you don’t believe in.”
Also,
former National President of the Association of General Private Medical
Practitioners (AGPMPN), Dr. Anthony Omolola, warned that the brain drain would
continue, as long as the atmosphere in which medical practitioners operate is
hostile.
He
regretted how practitioners, who had just qualified, sometimes struggle to find
a place for their mandatory housemanship, even from the medical schools that
trained them.
He called for the provision of robust infrastructure in the healthcare system, to enable practitioners get employment with good welfare packages.
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