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No more Dr Deaths! : Comments
By Nicholas Gruen, published 4/7/2005Nicholas Gruen argues whether a medical practitioner is a foreigner or not is a minor distraction - qualifications and performance are what matter.
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Compare as a very different take, my article on this week’s New Matilda ( I do believe in cross-fertilisation among our serious national opinion websites):
“A whistleblower at Bundaberg Base Hospital”, NM 29 June 2005
It is interesting how loth people are to comment on this subject. It is morally discomfiting because it is about life and death of our fellow Australians under a public health system that now delivers good or safe outcomes for the rich, and bad or risky outcomes for the poor. I don’t think Gruen sees that as seriously as I do. I have this quaint idea that we all have a right to an equal chance of life when we are in need of medical care.
The “area of need” approach to recruitment of overseas doctors betrays a deeply disturbing reality. It is everywhere now. We are not talking about finding doctors for Woop-Woop Hospital any more. In Canberra now, Canberra Hospital – a teaching hospital that caters to a regional catchment of upwards of 350,000 people – is, I understand, considering listing obstetrics and gynaecology as an area of need requiring foreign doctor recruitment.
Think about it – Australia’s national capital an area of need for women having babies in the public health sector ! So Canberra Hospital cannot recruit locally-trained and certified obstetricians and gynaecologists? Of course it could, if only it paid them enough for work in the public hospital system. There are plenty of experienced O&G doctors with good safety records working in the private system in Canberra for those who can afford them, or sacrifice other needs to afford them . Twenty years ago, those sorts of doctors gave some of their time and expertise working in public hospitals. Why don’t they now ? What has gone wrong ? This is just one example. ( To continue