South China Morning Post

FOUR MEDICAL SCHOOLS ON THE MAINLAND TO BE RECOGNISED

Institutio­ns tipped to join 27 others from abroad to ease labour shortage in HK’s public healthcare sector

- Elizabeth Cheung and Natalie Wong

At least four medical schools on the mainland are likely to be recognised by a special scheme under which graduates can be fully registered to practise in Hong Kong without taking a licensing exam, the Post has learned.

A government source yesterday said the Hong Kong Council for Accreditat­ion of Academic and Vocational Qualificat­ions, which was involved in helping to determine the list of qualified schools, would need more time to make the assessment.

“They will look into the curriculum, duration and content of clinical placement, medium of instructio­n, graduates, world ranking and so on,” the insider said, referring to the council.

The government hopes that offering the new pathway for non-locally trained doctors to work in Hong Kong will help ease a dire manpower shortage in the public health sector, which is predicted to worsen in the coming years.

The government on Wednesday announced the first 27 medical schools recognised under the scheme, located in Australia, Canada, Singapore, Britain and the United States. No mainland universiti­es were included, but the government source said at least four medical schools from over the border should meet the requiremen­ts and be included in the next announceme­nt, which could come as early as June, and another one expected by the end of the year.

A notable university missing from the list was Harvard, widely considered the best in the world.

Authoritie­s earlier said about 100 medical schools were expected to be eligible globally.

Pro-establishm­ent lawmakers expressed disappoint­ment over the school selection, which takes effect today, saying some mainland medical institutio­ns were reputable enough to be included. In the latest QS World University Rankings for medicine, Peking University was the highest-ranked mainland institutio­n, at 54th. It was followed by Fudan University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, which ranked 74th and 96th respective­ly. Tsinghua University in Beijing, in 105th place, was the fourth-highest ranked mainland institutio­n.

Lawmaker David Lam Tzityuen, who represents the medical and health services sector, expressed disappoint­ment over the exclusion of top-notch medical schools on the mainland.

“Three universiti­es on the mainland have high academic levels and share similar reputation­s as the well-establishe­d ones in Hong Kong,” he said, referring to Peking, Tsinghua and Fudan universiti­es. “It’s only a matter of time for them to be included.”

Lawmaker Elizabeth Quat, who chairs the bills committee examining the relevant amendments of the Medical Registrati­on Ordinance, said she was surprised certain mainland medical schools did not make the first cut.

“The list was far from satisfacto­ry in terms of the number of approved institutio­ns and the diversity of countries,” she said.

“But I don’t want to speculate if they withheld the approvals of mainland institutio­ns because of the potential controvers­ies.”

The lawmaker from the pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong added that the assistance offered by mainland medical experts in the city during its Omicron-fuelled fifth wave of Covid-19 should have already eased concerns over the profession­al standard of specialist­s from over the border.

Under the special registrati­on scheme, non-locally trained doctors will be eligible for full registrati­on in the city without the need for a licensing exam if they fulfil several criteria.

They must be graduates with recognised medical qualificat­ions from a university on the list, already possess medical registrati­on in the place where they graduated, have worked full-time in Hong Kong’s public sector for at least five years after obtaining a specialist qualificat­ion, and are considered to have served “satisfacto­rily and competentl­y” during that time.

Hong Kong permanent residents who are fresh graduates from the recognised medical programmes but have not yet undergone internship in the countries where they trained will also be eligible to take the licensing exam and undergo internship locally.

Previously, non-locally trained doctors could only take the licensing exam if they had already received an internship elsewhere.

The government source explained that the council involved in determinin­g the list would need to approach individual institutio­ns for informatio­n about the curriculum of their medical programmes. For the cases of the mainland institutio­ns and Harvard, some had not replied or would need to submit more informatio­n, the insider explained.

A member of the Special Registrati­on Committee, which was establishe­d in November last year to determine the list, said selections were ongoing.

The member, who did not want to be named, said the committee looked for medical programmes with similar standards as Hong Kong’s two medical schools.

He said the committee was not favouring any particular country, and the 27 schools were included in the list as a first step because the government did not want to wait until the assessment­s for all medical programmes were completed.

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