The Citizen (Gauteng)

Stop exodus of doctors – group

INSULT: HEALTH PROFESSION­S COUNCIL OF SA’S METHODS

- Brian Sokutu brians@citizen.co.za

Treatment Action Campaign’s impassione­d plea to health minister.

Mere days before the departure of respected French HIV expert Francoise Louis, civil society group Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) yesterday made an impassione­d plea to Health Minister Aaron Motsoledi to curb the powers of the Health Profession­s Council of South Africa (HPCSA) on registerin­g foreign-trained doctors.

Despite being faced with an enormous shortage of doctors, the HPCSA – with its stringent processes requiring foreign trained specialist­s and general practition­ers to first undergo further education in South Africa, before being allowed to practice – has been behind the exodus of some of the best medical minds.

Having lost her seven-year protracted battle for registrati­on by the HPCSA, Louis – part of the team who developed the national HIV treatment protocol in the country – is set to leave on Saturday.

A seething TAC general secretary Anele Yawa called on Motsoaledi to “immediatel­y engage the HPCSA, and show them that their procedures and processes are an insult to the 42 million South Africans who are being turned away at public healthcare facilities, due to a lack of doctors”.

“The departure of Dr Francoise Louis is the final straw. The time for the minister of health to act is now,” said Yawa.

“South Africa has a population of about 55 million people, out of which only eight million can afford private healthcare. The other issue is that in the public healthcare sector, we are dealing with a situation of an unacceptab­le ratio of one doctor to over 4 000 patients.

“In the private healthcare sector, we are dealing with a ratio of one doctor to less than 300 patients.

“As long as these inequaliti­es exist, poor people will always get second-hand service. The key problem is a shortage of doctors and nurses.”

Yawa said the TAC was appalled by the number of patients being turned away from public hospitals and clinics due to the shortage of doctors.

“People wake up as early as 4am to be the first in the queue, but when inside, they are denied services because of the shortage of doctors,” Yawa added.

He described “a denial” of patients’ rights to access public healthcare as “a flagrant violation of Section 27 of the constituti­on which talks about the right of people to access quality healthcare services”.

Yawa said HPCSA procedures and processes were “flawed and unnecessar­y”.

“How do you explain a situation where a qualified doctor with a 10-year service record overseas now has to go to school for two to three years in South Africa?” asked Yawa. “Our healthcare service is not better than other countries. We are faced with a shortage of specialist doctors who can do liver transplant­s and other operations.

“The minister has been spending time on the introducti­on of the NHI [National Health Insurance]. But where will the doctors come from?”

In his reaction to the implicatio­ns of HPCSA’s rigorous registrati­on process of foreign trained doctors, department of health spokespers­on Foster Mohale said: “We take these allegation­s very seriously and we will contact the HPCSA to establish what their reasons could be. We need to get their side of the story before jumping to conclusion­s.

“The department will continue to engage with relevant stakeholde­rs to identify potential solutions to prevent the exodus of doctors.”

HPCSA was yesterday not available for comment. –

Poor people will always get second-hand service

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