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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    The continuing emigration of doctors in Iraq: reasons beyond the search for a good wage

    Rocky
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    The continuing emigration of doctors in Iraq: reasons beyond the search for a good wage Empty The continuing emigration of doctors in Iraq: reasons beyond the search for a good wage

    Post by Rocky Thu 08 Sep 2022, 7:05 am

    [size=47]The continuing emigration of doctors in Iraq: reasons beyond the search for a good wage[/size]


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    Baghdad

    Toka Alani

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    08 September 2022
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    There are many reasons behind the escalation of the emigration of Iraqi doctors (Assaad Niazi/AFP)
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    Various Iraqi cities are recording an escalation in the phenomenon [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] outside the country, in search of work or a better living reality, despite previous and repeated statements by the health authorities in Baghdad that there is a shortage of medical personnel and their quest to entice migrant doctors to return with different offers, from Including the provision of housing and salary.
    On the other hand, reports [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] on medical and health personnel continue in various cities of Iraq, despite previous pledges to the security authorities to increase the penalty for assaulting them.

    Last week, the city of Sulaymaniyah, in the far north of the country, in the Kurdistan region, recorded a case of an attack on a doctor in a health center after the death of an elderly man.
    The [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] , which struck the country in early January 2020, posed a major challenge to the Iraqi health sector, which lost more than a thousand doctors and health workers during the virus, in addition to the damage to infrastructure after a series of fires and chaos that were the result of the situation getting out of control after receiving thousands of cases. critical daily.
    According to a prominent Iraqi official in the Ministry of Health, there is an acute shortage of a number of medical specialties with the continued migration of doctors abroad, specifically the specialties of anesthesia, oncology, neurosurgery, blood vessels and mental health, in addition to other technical specialties such as radiology, ultrasound, (Eco) and others. He stressed that Iraq also urgently needs 16 hospitals, and about 30,000 of those specialties are required by Iraqi hospitals in total.
    In an interview with Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, he indicated that the program to return immigrant doctors to Iraq is almost completely faltering, and there is even a migration of this segment to foreign and Arab countries, if it is for the purpose of completing studies and taking a higher specialization, or for work, but they do not return again. to Iraq.
    And he considered that the five-year leave for the employee, which was approved by the government as one of the treatments for the financial crisis, was one of the reasons for the exacerbation of the shortage of medical and health personnel as well, as this year recorded the departure of more than a thousand Iraqi doctors from the country under various pretexts and pretexts, including study and special circumstances, but most likely they decided completing their lives outside Iraq,” he said.
    Earlier, the Iraqi government announced its intention to bring in foreign medical teams to treat Iraqi patients instead of sending them abroad, as tens of thousands of Iraqis travel annually to countries, most notably India, Turkey, Iran, Jordan and Lebanon for treatment at their own expense, and unofficial figures indicate that about 200 million Dollars Iraqis spend on medical treatment abroad annually.
    Dr. Haidar Al-Taie, a specialized doctor, is one of those who left Iraq after the US invasion of the country in 2003, where Baghdad recorded dozens of assassinations against doctors and various competencies at the hands of militias and organized crime gangs. He told Al-Araby Al-Jadeed: “The real problem facing the health sector is The bad thing in Iraq is that there is no state governed by institutions, in addition to the control of parties and militias.
    He added that "the emigration of doctors before the American occupation was due to the difficult financial situation in the country, but after the occupation, more reasons appeared, most notably the deteriorating security situation, and the lack of a correct health system, in addition to the conditions that Iraq has experienced since the occupation, such as sectarian fighting and displacement, marginalization, and the absence of all real state institutions.
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    In the same context, Doctor Ahmed Al-Ani, who works as a resident doctor in one of Baghdad’s government hospitals, said in an interview with Al-Araby Al-Jadeed that his country “does not urgently need recruitment as much as it needs to raise the current health situation,” referring to the deterioration of the infrastructure of Iraqi hospitals and the lack of their number. .
    He continues: "Recruitment will solve part of the problem, but not all, and the number of doctors in Iraq is sufficient, but the state does not encourage them to stay, and does not provide them with appointments in the government sector, which forces them to search for better opportunities outside the country."
    On this, a member of the Iraqi Medical Syndicate, Ahmed Abdel Karim Al-Sheikhly, said in a telephone conversation with Al-Araby Al-Jadeed that migration is not limited to doctors only, but there are many segments, including engineers, university professors, and various specializations, seeking to migrate, the economic factor and the search for a safe place. Socially, stable and comfortable is the biggest motivator, "considering that the attacks facing doctors have decreased a lot in the past period, but the doctor, like other Iraqis, wants to live in a stable and comfortable place for him and his family members."
    He considered that if the randomness and chaos in the health sector were addressed and the modern administration and electronic system were adopted in daily dealings, there would be no shortage of medical cadres in Iraq, especially with annual payments that are graduated annually from Iraqi universities.
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