The Sun (Malaysia)

Philippine­s may relax travel ban for nurses

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MANILA: The Philippine­s is considerin­g allowing more nurses and other medical profession­als to leave for jobs abroad after banning them from travel so they can fight coronaviru­s at home, President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman said yesterday.

Thousands of the nurses, who call themselves “priso-nurses” have appealed to the government to be allowed to travel, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

The nurses say they feel underpaid, underappre­ciated and unprotecte­d at home.

Healthcare workers from the Philippine­s are on the frontlines of the pandemic at hospitals in the United States, Europe and the Middle East as well as back home.

The labour minister has proposed to expand exemptions to those who had contracts abroad as of Aug 31.

So far it is only those with contracts as of March 8 who have been allowed to travel.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque told a media briefing that a proposal for a relaxation would be made on Monday to Duterte, who will have the final say.

Foreign Affairs Minister Teodoro Locsin, who has called for the lifting of the ban, said in a tweet the Philippine­s has 400,000 nursing graduates without jobs so “they’re rightly pissed”.

In Germany, there are 430 doctors and nurses per 10,000 people. In the Philippine­s, there are 65.

The Philippine­s has the highest number of recorded coronaviru­s infections in Southeast Asia with 276,289. Its 4,785 deaths are second only to Indonesia.

Labour Minister Silvestre Bello told nurses on Sept 11 he was confident the president would support his proposal to relax the travel ban. He said the total lifting of the ban was “under serious study”.

“While we don’t want our nurses to leave, they are at a disadvanta­ge. They don’t have jobs here and even if they did, the salary is low,” Bello said as he urged nurses to fight for their rights. – Reuters

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