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Philippine physicians
are undergoing nursing studies to obtain better-paying jobs
in the United States. Approximately 2,000 physicians in the
nation are taking up nursing, the Philippine Nurses Association
recently stated, and over 100 doctors took the nursing board
examinations in June.
Demand is fueled by a paucity of nurses and other certified
caregivers in some western countries. The United States will
require an estimated 600,000 nurses by 2010, and Japan will
need a further 1.2 million. Dr Resuldo Malintad, the provincial
health officer of Davao Oriental province, said doctors considering
working abroad have decided to study nursing. “
The very attractive salaries and perks being dangled before
Filipino doctors and nurses abroad are simply irresistible,”
he said. A nurse working in a government hospital in the Philippines
earns about P10,000 a month while their counterparts in the
United States or the United Kingdom could earn up to P200,000
monthly, Dr Malintad said, adding his predecessor had resigned
to work in a New York hospital. Dr. Malintad cautioned that
government hospitals in the Philippines could regress into
clinic status if the current exodus continues unabated. “
The trend is already very alarming. Many of the municipal,
provincial and city health officers are now joining the exodus
of our nurses and doctors to Europe and the United States,”
Dr Malintad said.
In Negros Occidental about 50 of its 300 doctors have enrolled
in nursing programs. The provincial health officer, Ely Villapando,
said Negros Oriental would suffer from a shortage of medical
staff down the line because physicians studying nursing “will
be leaving in one-and-a-half years.” “
In other provinces, I am told that the number are bigger,”
Mr Villapando said. He discussed the problem with Mila Fernandez,
the Philippine health secretary, at a meeting in Manila late
last year. “
I thought we were the only province with this problem but
when I brought it up before a gathering of provincial health
officers, they all said they, too were having the same problem,”
Mr Villapando said. A government doctor in Bais City, Negros
Oriental, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he enrolled
in nursing because of higher salaries within the profession.
“
We will be earning in one month in the United States as nurses
what we make here in the Philippines for a year as doctors,”
he said. “Many people ask us whether we are bothered by our
conscience over this decision but let me ask you: ‘Has the
government ever bothered about us?’” he remarked. He commented
that all department heads at Negros Oriental Provincial Hospital
had turned to nursing.”
Mr Villapando blames the devolution of the Department of Health
in 1992 as the cause of today’s shortage of health-care professionals
in the country. Under devolution, the provinces administered
provincial hospitals, city health offices were placed under
the city’s jurisdiction and towns operated their municipal
health offices. Physician salaries were consequently the last
to be standardized, according to Mr Villapando.
“It’s degrading for (government) doctors to get a lower salary
than the janitor of the Government Service Insurance System,
or of a Senior Police Officer 2,” he said, adding the government
needs to place a higher priority on the welfare of its physicians.
“
If one doctor is missing, it is already a problem. If two
doctors are missing, that's bad,” he said. Negros Oriental’s
health-service delivery was recognized as being No. 1 nationwide
last year. The province consequently became a “Lakbay-Aral”
site for provinces wanting to emulate its award-winning inter-local
health zones or the District Health Systems. Mr Villapando
cautioned the province might be unable to sustain this level
if its physicians assume nursing careers overseas .Dr Malintad
said government doctors have suggested barring physicians
and nurses from working abroad until they have served for
at least two years within the Philippines. “
Of course, nothing can stop them from leaving abroad, that
is their basic right. But we should at least regulate the
exodus or else we will face a big problem,” Dr Malintad said.
Source: Danny Chan, SikhSpectrum.com
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