Corporate News
By XINHUA
In Summary
- Medical experts are emigrating to the West due to poor pay and low level of scientific research.
- Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe have suffered the worst economic loses due to the clinical brain drain.
- The recent Ebola crisis highlighted the continent's doctor shortages.
Education Cabinet Secretary Dr Fred Matiangi on
Tuesday called upon African governments to curb the number of doctors
moving to work abroad that has cost sub-Saharan Africa up to $2 billion
(Sh203 billion) invested in training the clinicians.
He said the medical experts are emigrating to the West due to poor pay and low levels of scientific research.
"The number of qualified doctors moving abroad to
work in the West has been high over the years, where nine sub-Saharan
African countries have ended up losing $2 billion as the clinicians seek
work in more prosperous nations," Matiangi said during the 6th Annual
Medical Education Partnership (MEPI) Symposium in Nairobi.
He said Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, South
Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe have suffered the worst
economic loses due to the clinical brain drain while Australia, Canada,
Britain and the United States have benefited the most from recruiting
doctors trained in Africa.
"The migration of trained health workers from
poorer countries to richer ones exacerbates the problem of already weak
health systems in low-income countries battling epidemics of infectious
diseases like HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB) and malaria and lately,
Ebola," Dr Matiang'i said.
The three-day forum has brought together local and
international players in medical education and includes representatives
from MEPI Schools across Africa, representatives from the funding
institutions and other partners who support medical health training and
research development in sub-Saharan Africa.
The Education Minister said there is a strong
relationship between education and development, with studies having
shown that increases in educational attainment precede improvements in
health status.
"This relation between education and health arises
because higher education leads to healthier life style, and because
higher educated people gather, process and interpret information about
healthy behaviour better," he noted.
The CS said Kenya's trends in maternal health
indicators favoured the more educated women compared to those with no or
low education.
"Indeed this is why the Kenyan government has
embraced universal basic education to improve enrolment and transition
levels," Dr Matiangi said.
The World Health Organization (WHO) Country
Representative, Nathan Bakyaita, said MEPI programs have contributed
towards improvement of the quality of medical education and learning
facilities, curriculum reforms, e-learning and faculty retention.
"Although life expectancy in Africa has been recording gains hence
improvements in longevity, the quality of life in Africa is greatly
diminished by heavy disease burdens, high morbidity rates and high risks
to life," he said.
In 2013, WHO studies showed that an estimated 24.7
million people were living with HIV, accounting for 71 per cent of the
global total, whereas the number of health staff has remained low.
The recent Ebola crisis also highlighted the
continent's doctor shortages with for example Uganda, with a population
of 35 million people registering less than 5,000 doctors and 30,000
nurses.
Mr Bakyaita said that whereas Africa is home to
13.4 per cent of the world's population, it contributes barely 1.1 per
cent of scientific researchers in the world, with just about one
scientist or engineer per 10,000 inhabitants.
The resulting shortage of qualified faculty in
African universities, especially in the scientific and technical fields,
affects the quality of graduates entering the industry workforce, with
11 million new graduates entering the African job market annually devoid
of the relevant skills to develop African solutions for African
challenges.
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