How to stop brain drain, especially of young doctors and other health workers?
Albania introduces a law, setting conditions for medical graduates before they could venture abroad
LAHORE/TIRANA (Web Desk/AFP) – Perhaps, we have always been hearing about the brain drain effects on Pakistan, but this trend now is worsening at an alarming as more and more people want to leave the country legal or illegally amid a challenging environment.
These educated, skilled or unskilled individuals can rightly be described as economic emigrants in search of a brighter future somewhere in the West, Middle East or even Australia and New Zealand.
It shouldn’t be a surprise given the economic uncertainty in Pakistan with soaring prices, rising cost of living and very few economic opportunities.
The health professionals are one of the main segment of this brain drain as the Middle East and the developed nations offer much better income.
But it has another aspect – lack of health services and professionals in Pakistan, especially in far-flung areas, at a time when private medical colleges have been mushrooming across the country, which produce thousands of new job seekers every year.
However, the lack of emphasis on health sector means the government isn’t offering employment opportunities to them.
Sadly, very few of these young doctors are willing to serve in remote or rural regions, thus multiplying the challenges both for the government and the people living there.
At the same time, brain drain of health professionals isn’t limited to Pakistan only and even the people from eastern Europe want to move westward, be in Bulgaria or Albania.
The challenge for these governments is arrest the development and Albania is certainly setting an example for nations like Pakistan.
THE ALBANIAN LAW
Seeking to stem the flight of its young doctors, Albania has brought in a law to make recent medical graduates work in their home country for up to five years, or until they pay back their tuition fees, reports AFP.
As one of Europe's poorest countries, the Balkan nation cannot compete with salaries and working conditions in Germany or Italy, where many young Albanian doctors move for work.
Since the law entered force on October 1, medical students have been calling for it to be scrapped. They have held protests outside the education ministry and Tirana University's Faculty of Medicine.
They label the legislation "unconstitutional" and argue it violates basic human rights principles on freedom of movement.
They also say it deprives them of the opportunity to develop their training abroad.
The students have taken their case to the Constitutional Court and its ruling is expected in the coming weeks.
"The new law violates students' right to freely choose where they want to work," fifth-year student Reant Kullaj told AFP.
"Students are motivated to stay (in Albania), but they cannot be forced," said Kullaj, surrounded by his peers outside the Tirana Faculty of Medicine.
While Germany has 4.5 doctors for every 1,000 people, Albania has just 1.9, one of the lowest ratios in Europe, official figures show.
In the past decade over 3,000 doctors have left the country of 2.8 million people, according to the federation of Albanian doctors in Europe. At least 1,000 of them work in Germany.
"It's a really big problem", warned ophthalmologist Pajtim Lutaj, who returned to Albania after a training course in Paris.
He believes the training system should be improved, with final years’ students integrated into the public health sector.
Other medical professions are facing similar challenges – at least 16,000 nurses and care workers have left Albania in the last four years, according to the national nurses' association.
This year the number of young people enrolling to nursing studies has increased again, said Gevio Tabaku, who runs UAlbania, a portal with university enrolment data. It shows these students want to use the diploma as a passport, he said.
'TORN BETWEEN TWO LOVES'
Not everyone shares the medical students' views.
Najada Como, a professor at the Tirana Faculty of Medicine, said "the law aimed at curbing the departure of young doctors is not restrictive."
"Working for a few years in a town, in a village, to serve your country, your people, is the most beautiful thing for a doctor," Como said.
In September, Prime Minister Edi Rama said Albania "cannot supply Germany with doctors".
"We pay for them, we prepare them -- and Germany takes them," he said.
Sixth year medical student Kristi Tata said he felt "torn between two loves – to specialise abroad and then return to Albania or to work in the country" after his studies.
Tata is awaiting the Constitutional Court's decision before making his choice.
BETTER CONDITIONS
Specialised agencies advertise better opportunities abroad, deepening the dilemma.
"Assured work and contract in Germany's largest hospitals, possibility to choose the city and place of work in 2,000 towns throughout Germany. Wage from 2,800 to 3,900 euros ($3,000 to $4,150) monthly", one promises.
"Career opportunities by all European standards", says another.
In a country where the average salary of a young graduate in the public sector is 1,000 euros a month, such offers are enticing.
But students say that more than salary, better working conditions are key for them to stay in Albania.
"Leaving is far from a solution," said Leada Tase, an ophthalmology intern at the Tirana University hospital.
"Albania needs doctors and the most important thing is to insist on improving the conditions necessary for us to practice our profession in the best possible way."
From November 1, Germany is introducing a new, streamlined immigration system for workers from countries outside the European Union like Albania.
The so-called "Chancenkarte", for people with a potential rather than permanent employment contract, could make the decision to work abroad even more tempting.