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https://theindependent.sg/filipino-nurses-and-doctors-face-grim-job-future-survey-warns/
MANILA: Notwithstanding the increasing need for healthcare workers, young Filipinos getting into the medical and nursing careers are having a tough time finding a guaranteed, reliable, impartial, and rewarding positions in the country’s healthcare system, according to a recent study conducted by researchers from Ateneo de Manila University and the University of the Philippines-Manila.
The study underscores a disturbing irony —even as the Philippines is confronted by a serious lack of health professionals, with less than eight doctors per 10,000 people, far below the international standard of 10, the route for fresh graduates is peppered with complications and impediments. More than 127,000 nursing positions remain empty, mostly in the countryside and shorthanded private infirmaries, yet systemic problems keep countless capable professionals from getting into these roles.
Researchers talked to dozens of young doctors and nurses, many of whom stated feeling lost and not supported as they entered the workforce.
“I finished my MD from one of the best schools in the country,” said a municipal health officer sent to a far-flung area in the country. “But when I worked here, it was an entirely different ballgame. We weren’t trained to deal with local government, procurement, or even community engagement. I wasn’t prepared—but this is the reality of how things work.”
MANILA: Notwithstanding the increasing need for healthcare workers, young Filipinos getting into the medical and nursing careers are having a tough time finding a guaranteed, reliable, impartial, and rewarding positions in the country’s healthcare system, according to a recent study conducted by researchers from Ateneo de Manila University and the University of the Philippines-Manila.
The study underscores a disturbing irony —even as the Philippines is confronted by a serious lack of health professionals, with less than eight doctors per 10,000 people, far below the international standard of 10, the route for fresh graduates is peppered with complications and impediments. More than 127,000 nursing positions remain empty, mostly in the countryside and shorthanded private infirmaries, yet systemic problems keep countless capable professionals from getting into these roles.
Researchers talked to dozens of young doctors and nurses, many of whom stated feeling lost and not supported as they entered the workforce.
“I finished my MD from one of the best schools in the country,” said a municipal health officer sent to a far-flung area in the country. “But when I worked here, it was an entirely different ballgame. We weren’t trained to deal with local government, procurement, or even community engagement. I wasn’t prepared—but this is the reality of how things work.”