In an article from International Herald Tribune published last July 20, the rich nations were blamed for the shortage of doctors, not only in the Philippines, but in all poor countries. As much as 18,000 Filipino doctors leave the country, mostly going to the U.S. to undergo training and eventually, to stay there for good.  Even Africa, where millions are afflicted with AIDS and very much in need of medical attention, is being drained of its doctors.  It appears that monetary compensation is one obvious factor why a healthcare professional leaves his home country.  Another less obvious one is career satisfaction, which some overzealous people think should be second priority to the god, Patriotism.  In the end, it is the recruitment of foreign-educated doctors by rich nations that is blamed for this “brain-drain”.

I don’t believe it is the rich nations’ fault that a lot of doctors flock to their countries for training and medical practice.  That is like blaming the bakery with the better-tasting bread for another bakery’s loss of loyal customers.  Or blaming a more reputable, consistent university for having more incoming freshmen than a college who’s failed to improve itself.  The rich nations are short of healthcare professionals and are willing to compensate well those who’d come to its shores to work, which is admirable really because it shows how much they care about their nation’s health and well-being that they’d spend for its survival and maintenance.

And now, contrast this with what is happening in our country.


Read the rest of this entry »

For now, I’d like to post an article I found in International Herald Tribune, published last July 20.

I want you, readers, to digest and fully grasp what this news article is trying to say because I think you can glean much about the current situation of healthcare in the country.  And based on this, I fear that we’re still going to be on a downhill for a while longer.

I will post a more detailed reaction about this next time.

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Developed nations draining poor countries of doctors
The Associated Press
Friday, July 20, 2007

WEST POINT, Mississippi: It took primitive conditions at a government hospital to end Dr. Minerva Rasalan’s dream of helping the poor in her native Philippines and send her on a mission toward permanent residency and practice in the United States.

During her time at the underfunded hospital, she found pregnant women assigned two to a cot, patients lining the halls and gloves and needles being sterilized for reuse. Without respirators, relatives sometimes were forced to manually bag their loved ones to keep them alive.

“It’s sad, especially for the pediatric patients who we know how to treat their diseases and most of these are infectious diseases,” said Rasalan. “We know what antibiotics to use, but we don’t have them. So, then we lose the patient.”

Rasalan is among thousands of foreign-born doctors working across the U.S. under special visas that allow them to practice in underserved rural and inner-city areas with the promise of eventual permanent residency. But critics argue the so-called “brain drain” of doctors leaving for work in the U.S. has further strained already faltering health care systems in the developing world.

Dr. Fitzhugh Mullan of George Washington University believes the U.S. — which is facing a shortage of doctors — must stop looking elsewhere to fix its problems. He compares the practice to “poaching” and said it amounts to poor citizenship in the world community.

Every doctor drawn to the U.S, Britain, Australia and Canada from poorer nations leaves a hole that likely will not be filled, he said.

Mullan’s research shows that areas such as sub-Saharan Africa (13.9 percent), the Indian subcontinent (10.7 percent) and the Caribbean (8.4 percent) lose large numbers of doctors to the big four nations. But there is little reciprocation. The U.S. exports less than one-tenth of 1 percent of its doctors abroad, for example.

“That creates enormous problems for the (source) country and for the educational and health leaders in the country who are attempting to provide healers,” he said.

While it is unclear what effect the arrest of the foreign doctors allegedly involved in a recent attempted terrorist attack in Great Britain will have on the ongoing exodus of physicians from developing nations, there is no question why doctors in developing countries are searching for opportunity elsewhere — even in the rural U.S.

While many American doctors shy away from these areas, they have a strong allure for foreign doctors seeking a better life and professional fulfillment.

Like Dr. Sanje Chaube, an Indian emigre who now works in coastal Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, under the J-1 visa waiver program, they often find needy clientele simply waiting for a doctor.

“I’ve had a very rewarding experience,” Chaube said. “My patients love me. This is the kind of patient population that I wanted to work with.”

But emigration by Chaube and others like him is leaving its mark.

India provides the largest number of foreign-born doctors to work in the four developed nations at about 55,000, Mullan’s research shows. About 40,000 of those work in the U.S. The Philippines come next with about 18,000 doctors exported, mostly to the U.S.

At least 20 countries export more than 10 percent of their physician work forces to richer nations. Sub-Saharan Africa alone has nine of the top 20 nations contributing émigrés.

Mullan said the U.S. has about 280 doctors per 100,000 people. India has 60. But doctor-poor Ghana has two per 100,000, while Zimbabwe, where junior doctors make about $45 (€32) a week, is down to one.

The loss of doctors in Africa, where millions have been infected with HIV and AIDS, is especially acute.

Dr. Kgosi Letlape, president of the South African Medical Association, said doctor migration creates a trickle-up effect, of sorts.

“What goes around comes around,” he said. “We are in a continuum. What South Africa loses to the developed world, to the United States say, we gain from Uganda.”

Kenneth Ronquillo, director of the Philippines Department of Health’s Bureau of Human Resources, said the shortage of doctors for rural areas of his country might be as steep as 5,000, though there are no concrete numbers.

He said pay seems to be the factor most likely to chase doctors out of the country. An entry-level physician makes about $320 (€231) a month — as much as some U.S. doctors can make in an hour or two.

“When we visit hospitals, we can already see that they lack doctors,” he said. “Even in metro Manila, there is a lack of trainees for anesthesia, and the hospitals already advertise for their needs. In the past, applicants would queue at the Philippine General Hospital.”

Rasalan has few regrets over coming to America. In addition to good pay and a happy situation for her family, she gets to practice a subspecialty that allows her to work with premature babies.

Her life would have been very different had she stayed in the Philippines.

“Had I done my training back home, I would still be living with my mom,” she said. “She would still be supporting me. They pay nothing there as a resident. You’re tired, you work like 48-hour shifts and they don’t pay you much. I don’t want to be a burden to my mom.”

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Tess Cerojano in Manilla, Philippines, and Michelle Faul in Johannesburg, South Africa, contributed to this report.

Lately I’ve been featuring articles written by my fellow doctors regarding the current healthcare status of our country.  And yes, we’ve received both positive and negative comments about the views presented by these doctors.  But that’s the purpose of the whole thing, right?  So that a whole lot of people be aware of what’s happening and to initiate discussion about it, in the hope that something could be done to stop the deterioration and to rebuild.

And since I want to have a balance of views here, today I’m featuring an article, written by Lalon dela Rosa of thE.thumBSuckeR.  He tells us of his niece’s experience of being admitted in a government hospital and how disappointing it is that there can be very rude public healthcare staff.  But, in contrast to the negative experience, he also detailed some good points these hospitals have.

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What Makes Our Public Healthcare Poorer?

by Lalon dela Rosa

It’s been like 3 days and 4 nights already that my newest/youngest niece, Chryz Ghian was admitted and is staying in a government-subsidized hospital (the National Children’s Hospital in E. Rodriguez Ave, Cubao, Quezon City) due to the child’s on and off fever that’s been going on for 3 whole days before her parents then decided to bring him in to a doctor.. he was first brought in to a private clinic nearby but then the doctor there suggested if we could bring the baby to PGH so they could perform further diagnostics as to why Ghian is having such fever, the clinic is unable to do that for they don’t have the necessary facilities to accommodate us.

So we’ve got no choice but to bring him in to PGH instead.. but as always, that public hospital never failed to disappoint us with their poor public service.. we literally waited for nothing (btw, we waited patiently and we weren’t even that typical demanding patients although i believe we have all the rights to do so, we’re paying high taxes, we exercise our right to vote, we’re law-abiding citizens and we approach public officials respectfully).. disgusted, we then went to the National Children’s Hospital.. it’s really long ride from Taft Ave and you might wanna ask why there? simply because i have an Aunt that’s working there as a Nurse Aid for more than 25 years and at least we’re assuming that good public service is guaranteed for us there.. but still we didn’t have it the way we should have it, and everybody else as well.

why i said so? because most (though there are some nice nurses and doctors naman) regular Nurses there are all snob and freaking hostile (in general) to us.. one time i went there to pay a visit to my niece and i weren’t able to get a friendly respond or even a definite answer as to where i could find my niece’s ward.. here’s a conversation with me and a good-looking guy nurse there (sayang ang gwapo pa naman nya).

Me: “Excuse me? do you have the patient’s list for this ward? (i pointed my hand across the ward room in front of the reception desk where the guy is sitting at)”
Good-looking Guy Nurse: (the guy is not even looking at me, instead he’s looking to a chart sheet that he’s flipping pages with while responding in an impatient tone)”hindi dito.. dun sa kabila (it’s not in here.. ask the nurse over there.)”

following what that guy told me i then went to the next reception desk fronting a different ward.

Me: “Excuse me.. do you have the patient’s list for this ward?”
Girl Nurse:Bakit po? (Why is that?)”
Me: “Oh i was wondering if you have a patient by the name of Chryz Gian Asancha, he’s a baby boy”
Girl Nurse:Ano po bang case nya? (What’s the baby’s case?)”
Me:uhm sa neuro daw po sya eh.. he has an on and off fever actually”
Girl Nurse: “(in a really nice tone) Ah dun po sya sa guy sa kabilang ward kasi dun po yung neuro-ward (please ask the guy nurse over there.. he’s in charge for the neuro-ward patients)”

see? it’s as if i was a ping-pong ball that’s being tossed back and forth.. i went to the first ward’s reception area again and this time i asked a different nurse, another girl and she appears to be an intern from FEU (her name was Joanne de Guzman, hopefully i remembered her name correctly, thanks to her).. she was really nice and she assisted me well with my inquiry.. i later found out that she was actually the one that’s in-charge of Gian (talking ’bout being saved by the bell itself).. by the time that i know now where i was heading, it’s nearly almost 10 minutes before 7pm already (visiting hours starts from 4pm and ends at 7pm and their really prompt with it).. and so while i was about to enter the ward.. the head-nurse sternly warned me not to come in for it’s already 7pm.. i showed her my watch and told her i still have 10minutes (rules are rules).. she kinda infuriated me further because she spoke to me arrogantly and arrogance is one thing (amongst my dislikes) that i hated most.

i finally was able to enter the ward and there i saw my sister carrying baby Gian and it’s really a relief point for me.. i sat down and began to ask her what’s the real score behind Gian’s on and off fever.. she told me that the doctor still doesn’t know (darn it! for almost 4 days that the baby is confined there? still they don’t know what’s causing his sickness? that’s slower than a slowpoke).. we then talked about her condition there and how they were treated poorly and disrespectfully.. here are some of the observations that i came to know being there myself and from my conversation with my sibling.. this partially reflects the current status of our public healthcare system.

1. the ward is actually half the size of a public classroom where there are 9 kid-sized hospital beds that’s piled up in there or better off said canned like sardines.

2. what made it even worse is the fact that when time comes that there are too many patients that needs to be accommodated.. each kid-sized bed are mandatorily shared by two patients! i know hospitals can’t refuse admitting patients but hello? having them share the same bed is a different issue.. say for our case.. Gian only has a mild fever that time but then the other baby that’s sharing the bed with him actually has a high fever that time.. it’s common sense that fever is a contagious sickness.. good thing that they only get to share the bed for a night only since the other patient that’s occupying the other bed across went home already early that morning and so Gian’s “bedmate” transfered to the now vacated bed.

3. the ward fee is P400.00 per day.. i actually can name some private hospitals/clinics which offers the same amount but provides better service.

4. the attitude problem of most Nurses and Doctors there.. it’s really prevalent in our country and it really pisses me off.. i tell you those guys really need an attitude make-over.. or else if they don’t want their job or if they’re unhappy.. then better off resign.

i am complaining really, but that’s because there’s something that really needs to be brought up to surface and complain about.

now in fairness, although there are things that disgusts me so much i’d like to give you some good things about our public hospitals.

1. there are BIG (i mean really big) discounts on patients who doesn’t have a job and therefore not capable of paying.. they have a patient there who’s supposed to pay P10,000.00+ all in all but then since the parents both doesn’t have a job.. they were only asked to pay a sum P1,300.00+ only.. that’s really really a GOOD thing and i’m really happy to hear that wonderful incentive.

2. the interns are generally nice and hospitable (i guess this is because they aren’t eaten up yet by the system, hopefully they won’t).. so kudos to all the Interns there.. we truly appreciated all your help.. we even reminded Joanne (Gian’s intern nurse) na huwag sana syang magaya sa mga tenured nurses doon.

3. Medicines are also very affordable there.. some actually come for free.. ofcourse they better be.. it’s in the budget.

Now i know there are a lot of good nurses and doctors our there but please understand where i’m coming from.. it’s very unfortunate that i have to deal with these rude people.. they need to remember that they are “public servants” and that their salary comes from us citizens and they better serve us right and well for we deserved every bit of it.

Have a nice day y’all!

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As a healthcare practitioner, I get sad when I read that people describe some doctors and nurses as rude.  Not that I’m concerned because it can reflect back at me, but rather, I’m sad because I see this as a symptom of what’s ailing our healthcare system.  Healthcare professionals are unsatisfied because not enough provisions are being given to one of the most important aspects of a progressive society.

I’m encouraging those who have posts related to Philippine Healthcare or maybe experiences related to receiving and administering healthcare to email me or just leave a message at my meebo or tagboard so I could get back to you.  I don’t do features on a daily basis, though.  I get to post only when I have the time so please bear with me.   :smile:

For those who’d been following the Healthcare posts, thanks so much!  I hope we can raise awareness through blogging!