Tuesday, 9th February 2010

Why Doctors feel the need to strike.

Posted on 28. Jun, 2009 by anonymous in Politics

The current strike happening by government employed doctors gained momentum yesterday when doctors in the Western Cape decided to join the strike action following a meeting at Groote Schuur Hospital.  As a doctor at the above institution I had mixed feelings about striking and abandoning our patients in what is seen by the general public as just a dispute over salaries.  The protest action is in fact a culmination of years of abuse that medical professionals have endured at the hands of the government.

Let’s start with working conditions.  The hospitals are over-capacity, and the doctors are overworked.  In my ward, we officially have place for 65 patients.  We had more than 85 for the best part of last week.  Doctors work 30 hour shifts when they do overtime, working a minimum of 60 hours a week in my hospital, but it’s not like this everywhere. Usually it’s worse.  Although, this certainly is an improvement since 2002 when as an intern,  I worked 100 hours a week and 30 hour shifts every third day.   We are expected to do procedures with needles potentially putting ourselves and others at risk of contracting HIV by needlestick injuries, this even after having been awake and on our feet for 24 hours and more.  Yes, just call us Jack Bauer.

If that was all there was to contend with, then it would be bad.  But add to that, unsafe working conditions. Doctors and nurses literally put their lives at risk to save others in busy casualties by working late nights, trying to save gunshot victims of gang warfare, knowing full well that someone might just overpower the lone security guard at the door and come in to finish the job.  I kid you not.  Many of my colleagues have had to dodge a flying bullet.

Supplies.  You’d think hospitals wouldn’t run of supplies right?  Nope. Gloves. Needles. Syringes. IV fluids. Linen. Antibiotics. Incubators.  Two nights ago, on call, I had to place two babies into one incubator, because we just did not have enough.  As an Intern and a Community Service doctor, I had to treat patients on the floor.  They had to sleep on the floor, because we didn’t have enough beds!  Not that there was anymore place to put any beds in the ward. It’s frustrating having to work in a SA hospital.  You have nothing to work with, yet are asked to perform miracles.  Often the doctor on call, has to decide whether to refuse one patient life-saving treatment, in the hope of saving another with a slightly better chance of survival.  This is Africa after all.

All this, in the face of dwindling staff.  Nobody wants to work for the state.  It’s too difficult.  Too stressful.  Dying patients you can do nothing for, in overcrowded hospitals, with nothing to help them with.

It’s no wonder so many of my colleagues have decided to jump ship.  Go to any hospital in the UK, Australia, Canada, The Netherlands, Ireland, New Zealand, and you’ll be sure to find at least one South African.  This brain drain is going to continue, unless the government starts making amends.  It’s a one-way ticket out of South African Medical Schools and into European hospitals.  And it’s spiraling out of control.  The less doctors in government service, the rosier it looks overseas, the more doctors will leave the government service.  And if you think it’s just whites, think again.  Blacks, whites, indian, coloured doctors….all leaving in droves. Ironically, I know of many European and Canadian doctors wanting to work in South Africa, in SA hospitals, for experience not money, and the government and HPCSA have them jumping beaurocratic hurdles for years.

Add to that, the government recently doubled the internship time from 1 year to 2 years, and are now looking to increase mandatory community service from 1 year to 2 years.  Effectively, if you’re 18 when you enter Medical School, you’ll be 28 when you’d be free to make independent choices about your career.  Until then, you’ll be told where you must work and live.   This is going to force medical  graduates to do internship overseas, never to come back.

Now coming to the salaries…after having spent 6 years studying, and at least R30 000 on tuition alone yearly , one can look forward to taking home around R9000 (after tax) a month as an intern.  If you ask me, I think this was an incentive for doubling the internship time and community service time.  Where do you get skilled workers to perform life-saving procedures locked into a 4 year contract to earn R9000 a month?

To do the job I do in the hospital I have three degrees in the medical field, but earn less than a gym personal trainer. If you compare my job requirements and qualification to any other professional in the government sector, I am being underpaid by at least 50%.  In private practice I would be earning at least 300% of my current salary.

So why do I work in government and not private practice?  For most people in my position, it’s a lot more about the job than the money. It’s about the patients. It’s about advancing healthcare in this country, and advancing the field of medicine as a whole, by academic work and delivery of professional service. Medical professionals are amongst the most skilled people in society, as it is almost a process of natural selection that produces these individuals.   But they’re being walked all over.

When the Minister held that press conference on Wednesday, it was a sneaky political move.  When has any employer presented a wage offer to the public without first taking it the bargaining chamber?  It was a move that they knew would be highly publicized and designed to remove public support for the strike action.  In it they announced massive increases for Interns and Principle and Chief Specialist.  But it was the grades in the middle that basically got nothing.  To use an Army analogy, it would be giving the new recruits and the Generals something to keep them happy but everyone in between got shit.  The generals were happy, so they didn’t support the action, and the New recruits were happy so they, who are usually the youngest, most militant, out the group, would go back to work.

But they left out the people that really count.  The one’s doing the real work.  Medical Officers, Junior and Senior Specialists.  The Interns, registrars aren’t going to be around forever, they have finite contracts.  But the Medical officers and specialists working in the government have made it long-term career choices.   This is not the first time that we are being duped either. We were promised that this OSD would come into effect July 2008.  It’s now one year later, and we’re still waiting.  We want what we were promised.

And those that ask is it worth it?  Is it worth patients dying for higher salaries?  That’s a difficult one for us, but in the end, it comes down to what’ll happen if we don’t do anything.  And the simple answer is this:  Our health system is at breakpoint.  It’s close to crumbling, and the government has chosen to ignore and put band-aids on it. It’s as if they don’t care.  When Manto got her new liver, she didn’t lie in a government hospital.

So, since most of us don’t have the heart or inclination to abandon our sickest patients, doctors in the Western Cape have decided to continue running emergency services, critical care and theatres only.  All outpatients and elective surgery will have to close.  We’re not doing medical teaching either.  Sorry students, we’re fighting for your future too.

If we don’t do something now…it’s going to cost much more lives in the future.

We humbly ask that the public support us in our endeavors.  In the end it affects all of us.

Dr Y.J.

take_action

If we don’t take action now, we’ll settle for nothing later!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • FriendFeed
  • muti
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Posterous
  • StumbleUpon
  • Suggest to Techmeme via Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Tumblr
  • email

Tags: , , , , ,

7 Responses to “Why Doctors feel the need to strike.”

  1. DOCTORS UNITE 28 June 2009 at 5:13 pm #

    SCARE TACTICS UNDERWAY:
    1-INTIMIDATION LETTERS TO HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS
    2-COURT INTERDICTS TO STRIKE LEADERS TO RETURN TO WORK
    3-THREAT OF POLICE PRESENCE AND RUBBER BULLETS TO DISPERSE STRIKERS
    *****THE STRIKE WILL CONTINUE*****
    MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC I URGE YOU TO JOIN US

    • vincenthofmann 28 June 2009 at 5:29 pm #

      Surely there must be a more, how should I say, peaceful resolution to this issue. I would argue that your mandate from the communities nearest you is to heal the sick, and to ensure your financial, administrative grievances are settled without impinging upon your ability to fulfill your obligation to south african society.

      I kind of expected more from such a respectable collection of individuals, I oft think of striking as no more than an excuse to gather in crowd, communally grunt and chant, dance a little jig and then piss off home feeling like you’ve done your bit. Rarely do strikes result in progressive action being taken, they ultimately result in wage increases – but is that a resolution to the way government tackles matters health? or is that merely a transient solution to shutting doctors up?

      • vincenthofmann 28 June 2009 at 5:41 pm #

        One last comment, yes I do understand that doctors in the Western Cape have decided to stay on to ensure urgent medical emergencies are attended to but I think there’ll be a knock on effect regardless.

        A message for the med-students; I recommend you buy one pizza from Butlers, stock up on Windhoek Draught and knuckle down for a few weeks whilst your educators toyi-toyi. It’ll be tough at first but I think you just have to grin and bare it…

  2. gretch 29 June 2009 at 11:33 am #

    hi,i totally support the doctors in their strike for several reasons.Firstly if you have visited a public hospital and some of us has no choice ,it is horrific!!not only the hours the doctors work and the disrespectful salary they recieve but also the discomfort and the lack of the quality of health care the ordinary South African recieves,not because of the incompetance of doctors but the lack of valuable resources.If you say that they are putting peoples lives at risk you should refere to the government because the department of health has been in the slumps since manto and nothing has been done to either improve or develop it but rather what our government does is blame others when ever their inadequancies are highlighted.Doctors do have a moral obligation but so does this government who employ them!!!i am outraged at the fact that almost 95% of people in parliament are paid way more than doctors whilst they do absolutely nothing!!!doctors save lives while they come up withstupid laws and under-developed ideas ,the latest to scrap the provinces?!do we really need to pay someone to be so stupid,we could just employ my seven-year -old cousin.And when skilled people like doctors decide to leave this so very and fabulous”democratic ” country you are labelled as not being patriotic enough!To all the doctors and also the med students who should also join the srike in my opinioon for they will be the ones who will have a higher mortality rate due to the same the reasons that the strike is based on and in ten years be the ones striking.Yes,people are dying but they will continue to die if our government does not improve the public health sector..and then they come up with another brialliant plan in the election run up.. a healthcare system similar to those of america’s ,this bloody one is not even working properly!!!

  3. Concerned Blood donor 6 July 2009 at 5:24 am #

    Doctors do their best being a doctor to their patient. We cannot blame them if sometimes they feel that their salary is not enough. They save lives and at the same time we need also to be aware that not even doctors can save lives. We can Save lives by being a plasma blood donor. Many person needs our help, they need our help by being a plasma donation. And at the same time you make up to $50/hour for plasma blood donation!As we all know, Blood bank shortages kill tons of people all the time. Spread the word about paid plasma donation and giving blood and we all benefit. You never know when YOU might need blood. The bloodbanker has all the information on how people can donate plasma blood to make money…and at bloodbanker you can find centers to donate at.

  4. Vera-Alfonso 29 July 2009 at 11:43 pm #

    I cannot believe this will work!


Leave a Reply

Please fill the required box or you can’t comment at all. Please use kind words. Your e-mail address will not be published.

Gravatar is supported.

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

<ul><li><strong>woo_ad_content</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_adsense</strong> - <!--/* Adgator.co.za Javascript Tag v2.6.3 */-->

<script type=\'text/javascript\'><!--//<![CDATA[
   var m3_u = (location.protocol==\'https:\'?\'https://ads.adgator.co.za/delivery/ajs.php\':\'http://ads.adgator.co.za/delivery/ajs.php\');
   var m3_r = Math.floor(Math.random()*99999999999);
   if (!document.MAX_used) document.MAX_used = \',\';
   document.write (\"<scr\"+\"ipt type=\'text/javascript\' src=\'\"+m3_u);
   document.write (\"?zoneid=1840\");
   document.write (\'&amp;cb=\' + m3_r);
   if (document.MAX_used != \',\') document.write (\"&amp;exclude=\" + document.MAX_used);
   document.write (document.charset ? \'&amp;charset=\'+document.charset : (document.characterSet ? \'&amp;charset=\'+document.characterSet : \'\'));
   document.write (\"&amp;loc=\" + escape(window.location));
   if (document.referrer) document.write (\"&amp;referer=\" + escape(document.referrer));
   if (document.context) document.write (\"&context=\" + escape(document.context));
   if (document.mmm_fo) document.write (\"&amp;mmm_fo=1\");
   document.write (\"\'><\\/scr\"+\"ipt>\");
//]]>--></script><noscript><a href=\'http://ads.adgator.co.za/delivery/ck.php?n=add8eb52&cb=INSERT_RANDOM_NUMBER_HERE\' target=\'_blank\'><img src=\'http://ads.adgator.co.za/delivery/avw.php?zoneid=1840&n=add8eb52\' border=\'0\' alt=\'\' /></a></noscript>
</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-468x60-2.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_header</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_header_code</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_ad_header_image</strong> - http://woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-468x60-2.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_header_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_leaderboard_f</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_leaderboard_f_code</strong> - <div class=\"trendhunter\">
<div><iframe frameborder=\"0\" border=\"0\" noresize=\"noresize\" scrolling=\"no\" marginwidth=\"0\" marginheight=\"10px\" cellspacing=\"0\" style=\"border:0px;overflow: hidden;\" src=\"http://www.trendhunter.com/widget-new?width=924&filter=filtered&period=24H&offset=0&carousel=carousel&author=&category=&color_choice_1=&color_choice_2=&entry_id=\" TITLE=\"TrendHunter.com Widget\" width=924 height=150></iframe><BR><font style=\"font-family:georgia; font-size:8px;\"><a href=\"http://www.trendhunter.com\">Trends</a> via <a href=\"http://www.trendhunter.com\">TrendHunter.com</a>.</font></div>
</div></li><li><strong>woo_ad_leaderboard_f_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-728x90-2.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_leaderboard_f_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_also_slider_enable</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_also_slider_image_dimentions_height</strong> - 144</li><li><strong>woo_alt_stylesheet</strong> - black_boxed.css</li><li><strong>woo_archive_page_image_height</strong> - 220</li><li><strong>woo_archive_page_image_width</strong> - 200</li><li><strong>woo_auto_img</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_cat_menu</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_contact_page_id</strong> - 292</li><li><strong>woo_custom_css</strong> - body {
-moz-background-clip:border;
-moz-background-inline-policy:continuous;
-moz-background-origin:padding;
padding-top: 40px !important;
background:#FFF;
}

#top-naver {
border-bottom-style:solid;
border-bottom-width:0px;
border-top-style:solid;
border-top-width:2px;
font-size:11px;
height:28px;
}
.widget_bp_blogs_recent_posts_widget ul.item-list li .item-meta {
margin-left:40px;
padding-top:10px;
}

.steve {
}

.steve img {
padding: 8px;
margin: 4px;
border: none;
}
.item-avatar {
float:left;
padding-bottom:5px;
padding-left:5px;
padding-right:5px;
padding-top:5px;
}
#bottom li {
padding:2px 0 20px;
}
.item {
margin-bottom: 20px;
}
.item img {
width: 100px;
height: 100%
}</li><li><strong>woo_custom_favicon</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_excerpt_enable</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_featured_image_dimentions_height</strong> - 200</li><li><strong>woo_featured_sidebar_image_dimentions_height</strong> - 78</li><li><strong>woo_featured_tag</strong> - featured</li><li><strong>woo_featured_tag_amount</strong> - 3</li><li><strong>woo_feedburner_url</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_google_analytics</strong> - 	<a href=\"http://afrigator.com/\" title=\"Afrigator\">
	<img src=\"http://afrigator.com/track/7643-none.gif\" alt=\"Afrigator\" />
	</a></li><li><strong>woo_highlights_show</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_highlights_tag</strong> - blogs</li><li><strong>woo_highlights_tag_amount</strong> - 3</li><li><strong>woo_hightlights_image_dimentions_height</strong> - 75</li><li><strong>woo_logo</strong> - http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/20-start-a-blog.png</li><li><strong>woo_manual</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/support/theme-documentation/the-journal/</li><li><strong>woo_nav_exclude</strong> - 31,1,2741,1206,1866,3553,2073,323,2742,3514,1982,1311,3102,605,2743,2863,2711,3160,3179,3182,3,3276,65,3314,3301,3328,3377,26,2798</li><li><strong>woo_recent_archives</strong> - #</li><li><strong>woo_resize</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_shortname</strong> - woo</li><li><strong>woo_single_post_image_height</strong> - 380</li><li><strong>woo_single_post_image_width</strong> - 280</li><li><strong>woo_slider_heading</strong> - The Latest Posts</li><li><strong>woo_themename</strong> - The Journal</li><li><strong>woo_uploads</strong> - a:8:{i:0;s:66:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/20-start-a-blog.png";i:1;s:74:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/19-moral-fibre-blogging.jpg";i:2;s:74:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/18-moral-fibre-blogging.jpg";i:3;s:73:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/17-moralfibre-blogging.jpg";i:4;s:73:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/16-moralfibre-blogging.jpg";i:5;s:73:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/15-moralfibre-blogging.jpg";i:6;s:73:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/14-moralfibre-blogging.jpg";i:7;s:57:"http://moralfibre.co.za/wp-content/woo_uploads/3-labs.jpg";}</li></ul>

Monty Wordpress Bayesian Spam Filter has blocked 2033 access attempts.

Afrigator