The National Assembly has been petitioned by medical and dental professionals operating under the auspices of the Diaspora Medical Associations regarding a bill that would require graduates of these fields to perform five years of mandatory service within Nigeria prior to receiving a full license to practice.
The correspondence, dated April 11, 2023, was addressed to “Re: A position statement from diaspora medical organisations – Bill aiming to ban newly trained medical physicians and dentists from leaving Nigeria.”
The letter, which was made public on Tuesday, was written to Femi Gbajabiamila, the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
The DMA in its statement said, “We recognise the problems posed by the exodus of Nigerian medical professionals from our health system including, but not limited to decreased access to health care services, lack of quality of care, care delivery deserts the inability to adequately enact healthcare and public health policy due to lack of manpower and leadership resource.
“The medical or dental practitioner is the glue that keeps the team functional and the leading force for an effective health care delivery system. Similarly, the medical and dental professional bears the burden for systemic failures resulting in the maladaptive structure fostering stress, undue burden, physical and mental anguish, lack of job satisfaction, poor working conditions, and much more.
“The major cause of brain drain includes a poor care delivery framework from a failure to invest in the healthcare to foster a conducive environment. The system does not promote professionalism, growth, work satisfaction, or a high-reliability culture. Other major drivers include very poor welfare packages, high levels of insecurity, limited opportunities for employment, subspecialty training, and sociopolitical and economic instability. The majority of these issues stem from outside the healthcare system and are outside of an individual’s control. Indeed, good governance and commitment to future investment in healthcare would improve conditions in the country that will allow security, good education for children, and improved compensation, as described in the Abuja Declaration.”
“Young professionals leave the country in search of better opportunities. Many are frustrated by the consequences of governance failures that have progressively worsened over the past 30 years. The unfortunate reality is the healthcare system is in a state of serious neglect, and training and career development opportunities are limited further impairing earning potential. Insecurity is rampant. Equity and justice are lacking for the average Nigerian.
“The Diaspora Medical Associations are invested in crafting effective solutions and are willing to participate in fostering solutions to that extent.
“The doctors called on the Speaker to embrace the purposeful systemic solution and ensure that a ‘quick fix’ attempt does not worsen the situation.
The associations copied the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan; the Chairman, Senate Committee on Health, Dr Ibrahim Oloriegbe and the Chairman, House Committee on Health, Dr Tanko Sununu, in the letter.