Need to Ensure Retention of Doctors in Sri Lanka
Sri
Lanka’s achievements in providing healthcare are remarkable for a country with
a GDP per capita of USD 3900, of which only 3.2% is spent on health. For example, the maternal mortality ratio is
33 per 100,000 live births, infant mortality ratio is 8.2 per 1000 live births
and life expectancy at birth is high i.e. 72 years for males and 78 years for
females. Initiatives that lead to these achievements were made several decades
ago. Between 1931 and 1951, Sri Lanka expanded access to health services by using
direct government provision and building a highly dispersed health facility
network in rural areas. So effective was the expansion in coverage that by 1951
Sri Lanka was able to achieve quantitative levels of health service access
comparable to many middle-income developing countries and substantially
equalize use of modern medical treatment between rich and poor.
The
health workforce (HWF) is recognized as central in attaining, sustaining, and
accelerating progress on Universal Health Coverage (UHC). HRH development and
management are unequivocally, aspects of health system development and governance,
which are the responsibility of the state.
Therefore, retention of health workers is critical to ensure
the delivery of quality health services. However, countries at all levels of
socioeconomic development face, to varying degrees, difficulties in the
education, deployment, retention, and performance of their workforce and Sri
Lanka is not an exception. This blog will discuss the need for ensuring retention doctors in Sri Lanka and issues related to mal-distribution and
migration of doctors.
Current situation regarding
the total number and distribution of doctors in Sri Lanka
Once a doctor completes the mandatory internship of one year
in a recognized government hospital, they have several career pathways; join
the Ministry of Health as medical officers, the University system as academics,
the Defense Forces as military doctors, the private sector or migrate to
another country.
There are around 19,900 doctors including consultants,
working full time in the Ministry of Health. Apart from this, 3050 are employed
full time in the private sector, either in private hospitals or as General
Practitioners (GPs). The defense establishment has about 320 and the University
system about 625 doctors in their permanent cadre. Currently on average, out of
1450 that complete internship, around 1200 are employed by the Minister of
Health, while around 220 seek employment in the private sector or migrate. The balance
30 makes a career either in the University or the defence forces.
Table 1: Total number of registered doctors in Sri Lanka
Number of doctors in the Ministry of Health
|
17,900
|
Number of consultants in the Ministry of Health
|
2,000
|
Number of medical doctors in the University system
|
625
|
Number of doctors in Defence Forces
|
320
|
Number of doctors in the private sector full-time (hospital
based doctors and consultants, GPs)
|
3050
|
Percentage of Ministry of Health doctors engaged in Private
Practice
|
60%
|
Percentage of Ministry of Health consultants engaged in
Private Practice
|
90%
|
The geographical distribution of doctors throughout the
country is far from uniform and will be described in more detail later on in
this article.
Issues related to
retention of the doctors
1. Mal-distribution
of doctors within the country
Mal-distribution of doctors remains a serious concern in Sri
Lanka. Although the absolute number of medical officers in Sri Lanka has
increased, there is mal-distribution between the levels of care (i.e. an
increase in medical officers in secondary and tertiary care institutions) that
hinder access to primary care institutions closer to homes. This leads to
people accessing higher levels of care for primary care needs resulting in
unnecessary cost for the patient and burdening the service provision at
secondary and tertiary levels of care due to overcrowding.
It is evident that the problem has not been corrected with the
rapid increase of the number of doctors joining the health sector during recent
years (nearly a three-fold increase of doctors in the last 25 years).
Conservative estimates suggest that the doctor-population ratio in the Colombo
district is over 2.5/1,000, which is higher than the ratio in Singapore. This
is in comparison with Nuwara Eliya district, which recorded the lowest value of
0.37 doctors per 1,000 populations in 2015.
Table 2:
Doctor-Population ratio in Selected districts
District
|
Number of doctors
|
Mid-year
population *1000
|
Doctor: population ratio (per 1000 population)
|
Colombo
|
5344
|
2375
|
~2.250
|
Kandy
|
1377
|
734
|
~1.876
|
Galle
|
701
|
563
|
~1.245
|
Monaragala
|
210
|
472
|
~0.444
|
Nuwaraeliya
|
255
|
740
|
~0.344
|
Many factors such as low pay, lack of motivation, inadequate
training, mentoring and supervision and high staff turnover make rural
retention of doctors a challenge.
2. Migration of doctors
Migration of professionals, or “brain drain” is a
well-recognized socio-economic burden prevailing in Sri Lanka. This is more
common in the field of medicine, causing a negative impact on health care
services. As per the available data up to 2009, nearly 10% of specialists have
migrated. For non-specialist doctors, the migration rate is 15%. Being a middle-income
country, spending less than 4% GDP on the health sector and for higher
education, brain drain results in a significant impact on the economy.
The following scenario explains how migration of doctors
will become even more serious issue in the future.
The average number of new registrations with the SLMC has
been around 1,500/year during the last five years. This number is expected to
increase further due to the large number of students who are studying medicine
in foreign universities (estimated to be around 6,000). Approximately70 percent of these new
registrants can be expected to join the Ministry of Health, according to the
trend in the past 10 years. If the Government is to maintain absorbing 70
percent of the medical graduate output, the medical officer cadre in the Health
Ministry will have to increase by about 1,300 each year. This would also mean
that budgetary allocations for the salaries of doctors and other cadres,
service improvements and infrastructure development need to increase annually.
Given the current state of the economy and low budget allocations stagnating
around 4 percent over the past years, this rapid expansion in the number of
doctors does not appear sustainable.
Similarly the private sector capacity for employment has to
increase by at least 20 percent each year based on the current estimate of
2,500 doctors working in the private sector. However, when considering the
trend of government salary revisions as well as the expansion of capacity and
revenue in the private sector during the last 5 years, this may not be a likely
scenario.
Even if the private health sector grows significantly, if
there is no guarantee of state sector employment, the proportion of medical
graduates seeking employment overseas is bound to rise above the current level of
15 percent. Doctors are more likely to start migrating to more lucrative
countries that offer better remuneration when compared to the private sector in
Sri Lanka. The classic example would be that of India, a country with a
doctor-population ratio below Sri Lanka but now the world’s largest exporter of
doctors.
The argument that migrant doctors would bring foreign
exchange to Sri Lanka is not necessarily true. As was seen through the 1970s
exodus of graduates, except for some indirect family support and occasional
small-scale investments, many would utilize their earnings in the country they
reside in.
The reasons for
migrating
A survey conducted in 2013 among first year, fourth year and
pre-intern students of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Colombo, revealed
that a significant proportion of the sample (23.8%) intended to migrate and
32.4% were contemplating the option of migrating. Better quality of life,
better pay, better medical services and better political stability in the
destination countries were the reasons for their decision. The majority who had
decided to migrate was aiming for Australia, UK and US. However, among the
students who wished to migrate, only 20.2% wanted to settle abroad permanently.
Interestingly, the majority of them wished to spend less than 10 years abroad and
return to the country.
Analysis of the socio-demographic profiles of the students
who wished to migrate showed no difference when compared to students who had no
desire to do so. The study revealed that the decision to migrate may be a
highly individualized one, fuelled by unique and heterogeneous contributory
factors. In the present era, global connectivity and better communication with
peers significantly influences the decision to migrate or remain in the country.
Possible approaches
to ensure retention
It is crucial for Sri Lanka to develop strategies to
minimize the migration of health professionals. Though restrictions to leave
the country and bonds between state and professionals can contribute to stem
the exodus, the quality of service provided by them in a state of
dissatisfaction cannot be assured. Hence it is of prime importance to identify
factors that make professionals want to migrate and rectify them so that root
cause of the issue is eliminated. Retention of doctors can only be ensured by
addressing the root causes for migration. In ensuring better retention of
health workers, the best results can be achieved by choosing and implementing a
range of interventions on education, regulation, financial incentives, and
personal and professional support.
References
·
De Silva, D. (2017) How many doctors should we
train for Sri Lanka? System dynamics modeling for training needs. Ceylon
Medical Journal, 624, pp.233-237
·
De
Silva, A. P., Liyanage, I. K., De Silva, S. T., Jayawardana, M. B., Liyanage,
C. K., & Karunathilake, I. M. (2013). Migration of Sri Lankan medical
specialists. Human resources for health, 11, 21.
·
Jayarathne,
Y.G.S.W., Karunathilake, I.M. & Marambe, K.N. (2016) Development of
Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Provision Framework for Sri Lankan
Grade Medical Officers, South East Asian
Journal of Medical Education, 10, 1, pp. 27
·
Karunathilake,
I.M. (2012) Health Changes in Sri Lanka: benefits of public health and primary
health care, Asia Pacific Journal of
Public Health, 24,4, pp.663-671
·
Ministry
of Finance, Department of Management Services (2017) General information,
pp. 19
·
Ministry
of Health, Nutrition & Indigenous Medicine (2018) Sri Lanka National
Health Accounts 2014, 2015, 2016, The Ministry of Health, Sri Lanka,
Colombo
·
Ministry
of Health, Nutrition and Indigenous Medicine (2018) Annual health
statistics-2016, Medical Statistics Unit
· Ministry of Health, Nutrition and
Indigenous Medicine, Human Resource profile (2016) pp. 6-7 Available at: http://www.health.gov.lk/moh_final/english/public/elfinder/files/publications/HRMprofile2016.pdf
· Rannan-Eliya,
R.P. (2006) Sri Lanka’s Health System–Achievements and Challenges, Institute
for Health Policy September, p.1
·
Socha,
K.Z., & Bech, M. (2011) Physician dual practice: a review of literature, Health policy, 102, 1, pp. 1-7
·
Uragoda,
C.G. (1987) A history of medicine in Sri
Lanka, Sri Lanka Medical Association
·
World
Health Organization (2018) Guidelines: incentives for health professionals,
Available at: https://www.who.int/workforcealliance/knowledge/publications/alliance/Incentives_Guidelines%20ENG%20low.pdf?ua=1
·
World Health Organization (2018) Health
Labour Market Analysis: Sri Lanka, Available at : https://www.who.int/hrh/news/2018/18168_SriLankaLabourMarketflyer.pdf?ua=1
·
World
Health Organization (2018) The global code of practice, Available at: https://www.who.int/hrh/migration/code/practice/en/
I understand the medical council is recently following UK and AMC exam pattern. If that is the case, can SLMC accept these exams and allow IMGs both Sri Lankans and other nationals to complete 12 months of rotating internship especially in private medical colleges, bypassing SLMC exams.
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