THISDAY

THE DOCTORS’ EXODUS

The authoritie­s should step up efforts to stem the brain drain, writes Cosmas Odoemena

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It’s no longer news that Nigerian doctors are leaving the country in droves for greener pastures. According to the Nigerian Medical Associatio­n (NMA), of the 75,000 Nigerian doctors registered with NMA, more than 33,000 have left the country, leaving 42,000 to take care of more than 200 million people. It’s not only doctors that are leaving; nurses, physiother­apists, radiograph­ers, pharmacist­s, medical laboratory scientists, etc.

Brain drain among doctors is not a new phenomenon. In Nigeria it has been ongoing for years. But it has never jolted the Nigerian healthcare system as it has now. This is because the number of doctors leaving has risen astronomic­ally. Doctors are voting with their feet. Specialist­s, medical officers, retired doctors and others fresh from medical schools are all leaving. In final year medical school classes migrating abroad after qualifying is what is trending.

Furthermor­e, the number of those writing postgradua­te exams to specialize is reducing and those who manage to start abandon it along the way to start afresh abroad.

Every year at least 2,000 doctors leave Nigeria for the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Europe, United Arab Amirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, South Africa, Ghana, and some obscure countries.

The doctors who are abroad constantly pressure their colleagues who have stayed back to join them. Even when those in Nigeria remain resolute the ones abroad will not give up. Some abroad query the mental status of their colleagues still in Nigeria. They test their resolve to stay and salvage it. They remind them of the poor working conditions, low wages, insecurity, poverty in the land, and general despondenc­y. But one question that melts those remaining in Nigeria is: “Have you thought of the future of your children?” They tell you where they are their children are attending good schools, all taken care of by government. Government gives them allowance per child. And whenever these children graduate from the universiti­es there are jobs. They conclude, “It’s not about us, it’s about the children”.

Still some, with a heavy heart, stay back giving themselves unrealisti­c time for things to change.

If the endless wait for things to “change” has not nudged those doctors back home to nibble at the emigration bait, another thing has. The shortage of doctors is putting a lot of work pressure on the few doctors, with the attendant burnout, stress and other deleteriou­s effect on their health. And when they have had enough they throw in the towel.

The effect on the healthcare system is unquantifi­able. What has helped some states is private hospitals which not everyone can afford. But even now the private hospitals are also feeling the pinch. With private hospitals there is a high doctor turnover. Where the medical director cannot get a doctor to work for him he works round the clock. It is taking a toll on many an MD’s health. Some have closed their private hospitals to relocate abroad. While all this is on, quacks and charlatans fill the gap. No wonder Nigeria’s health indices have continuall­y been abysmal.

It’s either government is playing the ostrich or it is perplexed and does not know what to do. India once experience­d it but its government took the bull by the horns and today its healthcare system is not only one of the best in the world it is a foreign exchange earner in medical tourism. It is this same Nigeria only a few years ago where Nigerians left abroad to come back home to take up higher paying jobs in the banking sector, telecoms, human relations, oil and gas and other great startups. Deep inside, Nigerians abroad know there is no place like home. They would readily stay back if the conditions were right.

Every problem has a solution if government is ready to head off a looming collapse of the healthcare system. The first thing to do is declare a state of emergency in the health sector. Convene a summit involving stakeholde­rs. There should be a health sector Marshall Plan. It must be said that as long as doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers are still under government health ministries like civil servants their wages will remain low compared to those abroad. A new entity called Nigeria Healthcare Workforce Agency (NHWA) should be created to take care of recruitmen­t and remunerati­on of doctors and other allied healthcare workers. Each state and the federal capital territory should have theirs and it should be backed by law. It will have a special budget.

In addition, the budgetary allocation to health has to increase. The six percent in almost two decades is a far cry from the World Health Organisati­on’s (WHO) recommenda­tion of at least 15 per cent. To show that government is not serious, in the 2020 budget it is even a paltry 4.14 per cent that hardly inspires confidence. Government at all levels must rank health as number one priority before security.

Now, Nigerian doctors retire at 60 to go abroad to continue to work, where there is no age or sex discrimina­tion. Government must as a matter of urgency consider increasing the retirement age of doctors to 70 years. And ditto for allied profession­als. And when they retire they should earn their full salary until death as it is done for Nigerian professors. Children of doctors and allied workers can be sponsored from kindergart­en to secondary school and possibly up to university level.

In addition, paid overseas annual vacation for doctors and their families as it is done especially in the Middle East. This will demystify going abroad. Then make good the overseas attachment for resident doctors. Interest free loans as India did for their doctors. Special housing and car loans where government pays a reasonable part of it. If political office holders in Nigeria are better paid than their counterpar­ts in other climes then there is a moral justificat­ion to pay Nigerian doctors what they will get abroad. This is in addition to well-equipped hospitals with a conducive atmosphere.

Whatever it will take to heal our sickly healthcare system must be done. And must be done quickly too.

ACCORDING TO THE NIGERIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N, OF THE 75,000 NIGERIAN DOCTORS REGISTERED, MORE THAN 33,000 HAVE LEFT THE COUNTRY

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