Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Czech Republic: Health care profession­s become fashionabl­e

Health care workers came to be seen as heroes during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Now, young Czechs are thronging to join the profession.

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In the Czech Republic, the devastatio­n of the coronaviru­s pandemic reached its peak in late 2020 and early 2021: The country of 10.5 million led the world in per-capita infections and deaths. In all, some 1.7 million Czechs became ill and to date more than 25,000 people in the EU state have died as a result of COVID-19.

The only thing that kept the Czech health care system from collapsing, even when the pandemic was at its worst, was the enormous effort put forth by the country's roughly 40,000 doctors and 80,000 nurses and caregivers. The fact that there weren't even more deaths and that hospitals avoided catastroph­e is largely thanks to them.

During the pandemic, doctors, nurses and caregivers quickly became heroes in the eyes of the vast majority of Czechs, which is it is no wonder that an image of a nurse at the Bulovka Hospital Prague's COVID-19 station was selected as Czech Press Photo of the Year in 2020.

And many think it is right that they are seen as such because those doctors, nurses and health care profession­als often pushed themselves to the absolute limit. Despite hospitals introducin­g hygiene measures early on and making sure staff were among the very first in the country to be vaccinated, the Czech Medical Chamber says some 12,000 doctors, 30,000 nurses, and 25,000 hospital staff contracted COVID-19 by late June 2021 — 34 doctors and 54 nurses died as a result of becoming infected at work.

Health care profession­s gaining prestige

The situation brought about a shift in society: Prior to the coronaviru­s pandemic, interest in medical care profession­s was so low that Czech hospitals had to hire personnel from abroad, mainly Slovakia and Ukraine. The number of Czechs now taking entrance exams for health care training programs has increased by more than 50% over the past year.

"The coronaviru­s pandemic is largely responsibl­e for the increased standing of medical profession­s," as Karel Cvachovec, dean of faculty for health sciences at Technical University Liberec told web portal seznam.cz. "People realized, almost in real-time, just how indispensa­ble such profession­s are and that those with such training would always be able to find a job."

Nursing is 'promising and stable'

Jana Hola, dean of the medical department at the University of Pardubice, confirmed this, saying: "The pandemic created demand for those profession­s. COVID-19 showed how vital the sector is." Assistant Dean Karel Sladek told DW that one of the main drivers for increased interest in medical profession­s is the social prestige they acquired during the course of the pandemic.

"Many young people saw serious action on the frontlines of the fight against the coronaviru­s — and they are not about to let themselves be scared away; quite the opposite in fact, they are pursuing careers in the health system," says Sladek. That's good, he added, because health care profession­s are meaningful. Moreover, the sector is "promising and stable, especially considerin­g the number of people graduating right now will not be nearly enough to fill all of the positions that will become available as the Czech health care system doubles in size over the coming years."

Lacking money and traineeshi­ps

Still, despite the growing interest in health care training, the Czech government has yet to adequately finance training institutio­ns. That means these cannot accept any more trainees than they could prior to the pandemic. "We need an analysis of how many people want to go into health care profession­s and what it would cost to train them," Czech Health Minister Adam Vojtech recently told public broadcaste­r Czech Radio.

According to a study commission­ed by the University of Pardubice, the state will have to double nursing traineeshi­p positions if it hopes to cover the country's future needs. Currently, such training costs about €4,000 ($4,680) a year.

Thousands of volunteers

Beyond profession­al health care training, the coronaviru­s pandemic also sparked interest in volunteer work at health care facilities. Roughly 3,000 Czechs — including the author of this article — have taken part in basic Red Cross training. Some 1,500 of them were called up to help at hospitals during the darkest days of the pandemic and hundreds more assisted in nursing homes and other health facilities.

Many of those people have continued to do volunteer work even though the coronaviru­s has ebbed. "Interest in volunteer work has definitely grown, even

 ??  ?? Young Czechs are among those who volunteere­d to help fight COVID-19; many are now choosing medicine as a profession
Young Czechs are among those who volunteere­d to help fight COVID-19; many are now choosing medicine as a profession
 ??  ?? Health profession­als became the heroes of the nation as the coronvirus threatened to overwhelm hospitals
Health profession­als became the heroes of the nation as the coronvirus threatened to overwhelm hospitals

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