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#JAPA: Health Minister Says Doctors Migration Is Not Peculiar To Nigeria Alone

In what seems like a self-consolation after several Doctors and health personnel have left Nigeria to seek greener pastures, the Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, has said the migration of doctors to foreign countries is not peculiar to Nigeria.

Ehanire noted that the Federal Government was only concerned with the experienced medical personnel who left the country, saying the FG was working on how to make them still offer virtual service to Nigeria.

The minister disclosed this when he was featured on the ministerial forum in Abuja for a reputable media house in Nigeria.

The minister stated that the Federal Government is working towards improving the condition of service of Nigerian doctors to check the migration of medical personnel.

“At a very senior level of those who have had postgraduate training, we are doing everything we can to improve the conditions of service.

“The health reform committee set up by the President is working and looking at that; we have been talking with the Ministry of Labour on how to do that.

“We are also talking about engaging those who have spent many years abroad; who are specialists who are highly specialized, and who know a lot of high tech medicine, to engage them to work with us even if it is virtually so they can do virtual consultations.

“They can come here every three months or six for a few weeks and do some work hands-on so that we can gain something from their experience and knowledge.

“This is so that we can harvest the knowledge and skills that they developed after working for many years in highly developed countries.”

Ehanire, who described the issue of migration of health workers especially doctors and nurses as a global phenomenon and not peculiar to Nigeria, added that people in those professions were becoming a very mobile professional group.

He explained that Nigeria produces about 3000 doctors every year and the number that is leaving is just about 1000, “so, there is indeed a surplus of doctors.”

He added that many doctors were still in search of where they could do their internship or serve their residency, saying that “once they undergo some training, the younger ones could easily be replaced quickly.”

According to the minister, the Federal Government is also working on civil service rules to make the replacement prompt so that once a doctor leaves, he or she can be replaced within a week.

Following the reports in the health sector, many stakeholders in the health sector including the Nigerian Medical Association and the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors have lent their voices to the issue of brain drain.

They said that unless drastic measures were deployed by governments to stem the tide of brain drain, national health indices may spiral out of control, leaving Nigeria in the bottom rank among the comity of nations.

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