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Africa
'being drained of doctors'
BBC
NEWS
January 10, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7178978.stm
Many African
countries now have more doctors and nurses working in richer countries
abroad than they have at home, research
shows.
There has long
been concern about the exodus of African medics, but the Human Resources
for Health study suggests the problem may be greater than assumed.
Several countries,
including Mozambique and Angola, have more doctors in one single
foreign country than at home.
And for every
doctor in Liberia, there are two working abroad.
The study, carried
out by the Center for Global Development in Washington, looked at
census records collected between 1999 and 2001.
It examined
nine receiving countries: The UK, the US, France, Canada, Australia,
Portugal, Spain, Belgium and South Africa.
The study is
one of the first to count doctors who are born in Africa, not just
those who are trained there.
Focusing on
training location, the researchers argue, seriously underestimates
the impact of losing people who want to become doctors has on a
country's health service.
Getting
out
The
report suggested the loss of doctors often went hand-in-hand with
civil strife, political instability and economic stagnation.
Angola, Republic
of Congo, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mozambique, Rwanda and Sierra
Leone all experienced civil war in the 1990s and all had lost 40%
of their doctors by 2000.
Countries such
as Kenya which experienced economic stagnation in the late 20th
Century and Zimbabwe, which saw political repression as well as
economic problems, saw more than half of their doctors leave.
At the same
time countries with greater stability and prosperity, such as Botswana
managed to keep many of their doctors, but so did very poor countries
such as Niger.
The researchers
speculated this could be to do with destitute countries not producing
large numbers of would-be doctors with the financial capital or
connections to leave.
The UK is one
of the few countries to have introduced a code preventing it from
actively recruiting from sub-Saharan Africa.
But despite
this, Home Office figures show that 17,620 African doctors and nurses
joined the NHS last year.
The Department
of Health notes that while NHS trusts are banned from actively trying
to enlist from Africa, there is little to stop health professionals
from these countries applying for work permits to come to the UK.
The charity
ActionAid said the brain drain was "a huge threat" to
Africa.
"One of
the best way to keep healthcare professionals in the countries that
need them is to pay them properly - but currently health systems
in many African countries are woefully underfunded," said Nick
Corby, policy officer at the charity.
"The UK
government could do Africa a real service by upping aid levels for
health systems, ensuring that desperately needed doctors and nurses
stay where the need is greatest."
Number of doctors
abroad:
| Mozambique |
75% |
| Angola |
70% |
| Ghana |
56% |
| Kenya |
51% |
| Rwanda |
43% |
| Sudan |
13% |
| Niger |
9% |
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