Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Staff shortage raises disease fears

Health workers examine residents in Ia Hru, Chu Se District in the Central Highland province of Gia Lai. Viet Nam's disease control faces difficulties including the shortage of preventative health workers and a low budget for the sector. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh

Health workers examine residents in Ia Hru, Chu Se District in the Central Highland province of Gia Lai. Viet Nam's disease control faces difficulties including the shortage of preventative health workers and a low budget for the sector. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh

HA NOI — A shortage of essential medical workers threatens the control of the contagious diseases that constantly stalk Viet Nam.

Flu, dengue fever, malaria, encephalitis and diarrhoea strike an estimated 3.5 million people throughout the country each year.

But Health Ministry figures show that only about 8,600 preventative health workers are available to meet the threat.

Of these, about 1,200 work in central facilities and meet about 77 per cent of demand; another 7,397 are in the provinces where they meet 54 per cent of demand.

Up to 75 per cent of the workers have not been professionally trained.

Still, they have to monitor formerly infected zones; inspect the environment; find the causes of outbreaks and mobilise people to take preventive and control measures to stop dieseases from spreading.

Too small spending is blamed for the shortage.

The budget for preventive medicine accounts for just 25 per cent of all medical spending.

Expenses

Medical worker Doan Tat Thang, of the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta Soc Trang Province preventive medicine centre, complained that although he and his fellow workers sometimes had to travel long distances to do their job, their expenses met only 30 per cent of cost.

"We sometimes have to travel up to 80 km by boat and motorbike to spray chemicals to kill mosquitoes and control dengue fever," he said.

"It often takes us from early morning to late at night to complete the work."

Very few preventive medicine workers were willing to work in remote regions for the prevailing daily pay of just VND30,000 (US$1.5), said Dr Luu Thi Thu Ha from the southern delta's Dong Thap Province preventive medicine centre.

Many of the workers also wanted to attend training courses to improve their skills.

"I was unclear about how to write a report about an epidemic and how to manage my staff to employ effective preventive measures before I had a chance to join a training course last year," she said.

Target

Viet Nam needs an extra 5,500 tertiary-educated preventive medical workers; 1,000 post-graduates and 4,200 nurses and technicians to meet the strategy for national preventive medicine to 2020.

The target will not be easily met.

A lack of qualified lecturers will be a major hindrance.

"In addition facilities and equipment for the study and practice of preventive medicine at the medical universities are obsolete and do not meet demand," said Health Ministry's Science and Training Department director Truong Viet Dung.

The low rate of student enrollments for preventive medicine compared with other health disciplines was also a barrier, he said.

"The low salary and hard work makes preventive medicine unattractive." he added.

A 2009 survey revealed that the number of students applying to study general medicine accounted for 91 per cent; the figure for preventive medicine was 73.8 per cent.

But Ha Noi College of Medicine and Pharmacy graduate Nguyen Thi Linh, said she had decided to train as a general nurse instead of a preventive medical worker as the former would provide her with more employment opportunities.

"I can apply for jobs at hospitals or any medical centres as a general nursing graduate, while the opportunities for a preventive medical worker is limited," she said.

The health ministry planned to spend more for facilities, lecturers and training programmes to address the shortage, Dung said.

The ministry would also providepreventive-medical-training for diploma holders in other medical disciplines to encourage them to work in the field.

The Ha Noi Medical University was piloting the training programme and if successful, it would be applied at other medical universities.

Potential students might also be provided scholarships or made exempt from tuition fees.

The health ministry's preventive medicine department's deputy director Phan Trong Lan said the ministry would work to provide preventive medical workers with a variety of preferential policies to help improve their working and living conditions.

A five-year preventive medical training master plan is to begin next year to train 1,000 preventive medical workers by 2015. — VNS

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

More than 1,000 Asian medical specialists listen to 500 reports

HA NOI — Nearly 1,500 leading medical specialists from 36 countries and territories gathered in Ha Noi yesterday for the 10th Meeting of Endoscopic and Laparoscopic Surgeons of Asia (ELSA 2010).

Opening the meeting, Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Thi Xuyen stressed the importance and development of endola-paroscopic surgery in the medical sector since the technology was first applied in the 1980s, and the achievements made by Vietnamese surgeons and scientists.

The meeting was an opportunity for Vietnamese specialists to meet with colleagues from regional countries and across the world, helping the Vietnamese medical sector integrate internationally, the deputy minister said.

The three-day meeting heard almost 500 reports on advanced endolaparoscopy, presenting the latest and most important achievements at global and regional healthcare centres. Vietnamese specialists also presented new achievements in endolaparoscopy in the country.

In addition, the delegates participated in an interactive television programme on endolaparoscopic surgery from the Viet Nam-Germany Hospital and the Central Paediatrics Hospital, and attended the launching ceremony of the Exhibition Centre for Medical Instruments and Pharmaceuticals.

Later that day, delegates were received by President Nguyen Minh Triet, who affirmed the Party and State's interest in the medical sector and its commitment to ongoing investment in it.

Although poor and war-devastated, Viet Nam has almost completed the UN Millennium Development Goals ahead of schedule, with outstanding achievements in healthcare and poverty reduction.

President Triet welcomed international delegates to ELSA 2010, saying they brought to Vietnamese people friendly sentiments from international friends and shared experiences on the world's most advanced medicine with Vietnamese colleagues.

He said he hoped other countries would help Viet Nam to train doctors, recommend well-known professors and scientists to work and lecture in Viet Nam and invest in healthcare, in order to help Viet Nam build modern centres.

International delegates spoke highly of recent developments in Viet Nam's medical sector, including endolaparoscopic surgery and Vietnamese doctors' skills, that have helped reduce the number of Vietnamese people seeking treatment abroad.—VNS

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