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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Use scholarship bonds to bring foreign-trained docs back
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->I READ in The Straits Times on Saturday that the Education and Health ministries are considering setting up a new medical school to meet rising demand.
The cost of training a doctor over five years locally at the National University of Singapore has for many years been over $400,000. Students pay school fees of around $90,000 and serve out a bond to repay the over $310,000 subsidised by the Government.
The tuition fee for a student in one of the top 10 medical schools in Britain, say Glasgow, is around 21,600 pound sterling (S$47,000). Even taking into account lodging and expenses, the cost savings would be significant.
Moreover, there is no compromise on the quality of training.
In times of economic gloom, it would be wise to explore such cheaper alternatives.
Sending Singaporeans to such schools on scholarship bonds and then requiring them to return to work in Singapore makes much more sense. Ho Hua Sze
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->I READ in The Straits Times on Saturday that the Education and Health ministries are considering setting up a new medical school to meet rising demand.
The cost of training a doctor over five years locally at the National University of Singapore has for many years been over $400,000. Students pay school fees of around $90,000 and serve out a bond to repay the over $310,000 subsidised by the Government.
The tuition fee for a student in one of the top 10 medical schools in Britain, say Glasgow, is around 21,600 pound sterling (S$47,000). Even taking into account lodging and expenses, the cost savings would be significant.
Moreover, there is no compromise on the quality of training.
In times of economic gloom, it would be wise to explore such cheaper alternatives.
Sending Singaporeans to such schools on scholarship bonds and then requiring them to return to work in Singapore makes much more sense. Ho Hua Sze