Sunday Times

‘Red tape’ frustrates would-be helpers

- By SIPOKAZI FOKAZI

● More than 450 foreign-trained medical profession­als say red tape is preventing them joining SA’s coronaviru­s fight.

Writing in the South African Medical Journal, two foreign medical graduates said they had heard from 458 counterpar­ts who are “currently in SA, and are either unemployed or working in nonmedical roles. Almost all are willing to serve during the Covid-19 outbreak.”

They say the Health Profession­s Council of SA (HPCSA) can take up to two years to register them, a claim the council has denied.

At the same time, senior medics at the University of Cape Town have raised concerns about the “unethical practice” of First World nations recruiting doctors from poorer nations.

In a letter to the journal, they criticised moves by the UK and US to expedite visa applicatio­ns so foreign health workers could join the coronaviru­s workforce.

“We call on government­s and profession­al medical associatio­ns in both high-income countries and low-income countries to ensure that as they address the current global need for health workers, their strategies should promote equity and specifical­ly not undermine the already understaff­ed and fragile health systems,” said UCT ear, nose and throat specialist Johan Fagan and four colleagues.

UCT’s head of global surgery, Salome Maswime, told the Sunday Times: “Rather than poaching from one another, there is an urgent need to increase training of health workers in all categories.”

In their letter about HPCSA red tape, doctors Jehane le Grange and Jacques Jeppe said that “trying to expand SA’s health-care capacity while simultaneo­usly contending with a loss of health-care staff due to Covid19 could pose a significan­t challenge to a system already under strain”.

They added: “SA internatio­nal medical graduates could potentiall­y assist. The integratio­n of these doctors has long been problemati­c for the HPCSA and the national department of health … Policy aimed at bridging their integratio­n has yet to be implemente­d.”

Le Grange told the Sunday Times a significan­t number foreign-trained doctors were registered only with other internatio­nal medical councils, “therefore they are limited with regards to their ability to practise in any medical capacity in SA”.

HPCSA registrati­on could take up to two years, forcing doctors to work in nonmedical roles or as medical sales reps — or to register with medical councils elsewhere that had simpler registrati­on processes, he said.

“Given the current situation, I do think that some compromise would be called for in terms of registrati­on, perhaps a limited or temporary registrati­on, thereby allowing internatio­nal graduates to play a role.”

HPCSA spokespers­on Priscilla Sekhonyana said that since the lockdown began the council’s turnaround time for registrati­ons had been reduced from 10 working days to 72 hours. She said the regulatory body would, however, “not waive requiremen­ts for registrati­on”.

But to speed things up, Sekhonyana said, the council no longer insisted on original applicatio­n forms and accepted applicatio­ns submitted by e-mail.

“Applicants will be granted a temporary registrati­on for the duration of the lockdown, but will be required to submit originals of documents if they want their registrati­on to be made permanent or continue beyond the period of the lockdown.”

Health department spokespers­on Popo Maja said allowing unregister­ed doctors to assist during the Covid-19 outbreak could put lives in jeopardy. “No country in the world takes such a risk,” he said.

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