Kathimerini English

Study exposes Greek malady

Greece has surplus of at least 20,000 specialize­d doctors, number growing by the year

- BY PENNY BOULOUTZA

Greece has a surplus of at least 20,000 specialize­d doctors and the number is growing by the year. Greece has produced a number of doctors which is disproport­ionate to its population of about 10.7 million – a trend that intensifie­d in the past two decades. A substantia­l percentage of these profession­als are either unemployed or underemplo­yed. The rate stands at 28 percent among Athens doctors.

It is no coincidenc­e that, today, about 17,500 Greek doctors work outside the country. The irony is that, in spite of the surplus of doctors, the ongoing financial crisis has left the National Health System (ESY) with shortages of doctors and health profession­als. It is estimated that there are up to 6,000 vacant posts for doctors at Greek public hospitals. At the same time, unlike other European countries, there is a shortage of general practition­ers, or family doctors – a fact which reflects the state of primary healthcare in Greece.

The oversupply of specialize­d doctors and the shortage of general practition­ers is confirmed by a study conducted by the Greek Health Ministry and the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) which was published under the title “National Health Strategy and actions of the health sector in the National Strategic Reference Framework 2014-2020.” According to the study, in Greece there are currently about 3,800 general practition­ers when, according to the European Union average, there should be around 8,140. Greece, in other words, needs an extra 4,350 family doctors.

Meanwhile, the number of specialize­d doctors stands far above the EU average. In 2014, there were 42,647 specialize­d doctors in Greece when, according to the EU average, their number should have been around 20,283.

The same study shows a surplus of laboratory physicians, who number about 4,500 when the country should have around 600, again, compared to the EU average. According to the study, “in total, taking into account the country’s particular­ities, it is estimated that there is a surplus of more than 20,000 specialize­d doctors in the country, a figure which continues to rise every year.”

The total number of doctors in Greece (specialize­d and general practition­ers) is approximat­ely 69,000. This figure puts Greece in top place among member-countries of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) in the ratio of doctors to population. Thus, in Greece there are 6.3 doctors per 1,000 inhabitant­s, when the average in OECD countries is 3.3 doctors per 1,000. China, Turkey and Colombia have fewer than 2 doctors per 1,000 people.

Since 2000, the number of doctors has increased across nearly all OECD countries, both in absolute figures as well as in proportion to the national population. This increase has been acute in countries that started out with a small number of doctors, such as Turkey, Korea and Mexico, but also in countries such as Greece and Austria. In Greece, the number of doctors increased significan­tly between 2000 and 2008, jumping from 47,250 to 68,000, but the number has stabilized somewhat in recent years.

At the same time, Greece has very few nurses in proportion to its population compared to other states in the West. In Greece there are 3.6 nurses for every 1,000 inhabitant­s, when the OECD average is 9.1 nurses per 1,000. In countries such as Switzerlan­d, Norway and Denmark there are more than 16 nurses for every 1,000 inhabitant­s – Switzerlan­d has the highest ratio, with 17.4 nurses per 1,000 residents.

In OECD countries, the nurses to doctors ratio is 3 to 1, whereas in Greece it is 0.6 to 1. In countries including Finland, Japan, Ireland and Denmark, the ratio is at least 4.5 nurses for every doctor.

Greece has the highest number of

recent data, the number of specialize­d doctors in Greece stands far above the European Union average. In 2014, there were 42,647 specialize­d doctors in Greece when, according to the EU average, their number should have been around 20,283. pharmacies per inhabitant in all of Europe. According to the Panhelleni­c Pharmacist­s’ Associatio­n, the number of pharmacist­s who could run a private pharmacy stands at 10,800, while the number of actual pharmacies is 9,500.

According to the Pharmaceut­ical Group of the European Union, most pharmacies can be found in Turkey (24,827), France (22,455), Spain (21,854) and Germany (20,441). Greece is in seventh place with 9,500, ahead of Belgium, which has 4,929. The countries with the smallest number of pharmacies are Luxembourg (101), Slovenia (324) and Denmark (368).

With 84 pharmacies per 100,000 inhabitant­s, Greece has the highest pharmacy density per inhabitant. Cyprus is in second place with 55.5 pharmacies per 100,000 inhabitant­s and Bulgaria third with 51 per 100,000 inhabitant­s. The smallest ratio is found in Denmark, the Netherland­s and Sweden, which have 6.5, 11.8 and 14 pharmacies per 100,000 population respective­ly.

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