Decamping From Clinical Medicine to Public Health: Nigeria's Intra-health sector Japa
The
verb “decamp” is almost confined to political parlance among Nigerians, as it
frequently adorns the headlines of media houses when they raise the alarm over
the defection of politicians from one political party to another. It turns out,
however, that major news outlets haven’t been led to investigate and create a
sense of urgency on the need to control the cross-carpeting of a critical group
of workers in one of the most essential non-political sectors of Nigeria’s
landscape. Therefore, this article aims to shed light on a similar drift within
Nigeria’s health sector, as well as the carrots being dangled by the receiving
end (public health) that leave the donor entity (frontline clinical health) at
the short end of the stick.
I often
hear colleagues in Nigeria tell me of their desire to exit clinical practice in
search of “WHO-like jobs” (World Health Organization-type careers) that can
take them around the world, attract them to conferences in beautiful hotels, earn
forex-denominated monies that include salaries, per diems & estacodes, and guarantee
other perks that frontline clinical practice rarely offers. Of course, every professional
wants high returns – rightfully so – on their investment in acquiring
knowledge, skills, expertise, and certifications. However, if the political and
bureaucratic administrators could read between the lines, they ought to sense the
greater disaster in the quiet but mass defection of medical doctors to public
health.
Nigeria’s
public health system has mainly remained funded by external donors and offers
relatively higher salaries & allowances to physicians who are fortunate to
secure employment slots within this space. Amid the general shortage of doctors
in Nigeria, the public health sector receives a larger percentage of these few
medical hands. In that case, it is likely due to doctors migrating from
economically challenging clinical settings to more financially stable public
health settings. Our country’s healthcare development partners have not
necessarily attracted genuinely interested public health practitioners who are
driven by a natural passion for non-clinical practice beyond the hospital
setting. It is the incentives, calculated by converting dollar equivalents of
budgeted earnings to naira, that continually lure male and female Nigerian medical
doctors out of traditional hospitals where they directly interface with
patients. Again, such cravings signify a legitimate want of better working
conditions than the conventional in-hospital jobs typically offer the Nigerian
doctor, pharmacist, medical laboratory scientist, nurse, midwife, and so forth.
Please
note again that my concern does not stem from any assertion that other medical
doctors lack the right to pursue better career opportunities, but from the
shortage of clinicians in the traditional hospital environment. After all, I am
a public health practitioner too, one who began his medical career in a
hospital but opted for the public health field primarily out of my knack for
coordination, management, administration, leadership, planning, implementation,
and monitoring of the larger healthcare system (and not merely a hospital).
However, I often offer voluntary clinical services after my 9-5, as I have a
moderate interest in clinical consultations, minor surgical interventions, and sundry
in-hospital practices. As a Health
System Strengthening expert, I am understandably pained that those who should
know and act are oblivious to the fact that an unpalatable hybrid of the Japa
syndrome (a sobriquet for the international migration of Nigerians) may already
be in our hands and lives if a larger proportion of medical school graduates
choose public health over frontline clinical practice.
A
Yoruba idiom, “Ase’yi s’oun ma ba’bi kan je (tend to all parts equitably
without destroying any part), is a reminder of the unacceptably lukewarm
disposition of Nigeria’s political office holders and healthcare administrators
to the gradual dearth of one section to the benefit of another. The fact that
Nigeria has only 30,000 medical doctors registered by the Medical & Dental
Council of Nigeria (MDCN) for its estimated 220 million population is a sad
reality in itself. To assume that this inadequate number of caregivers provides
frontline healthcare services within hospitals is a tragic reminder of our
penchant in this part of the world for the pretentious use of data for critical
policy interventions. At first glance, this “intra-sector” but
“inter-workspace” migration may appear harmless to the entire health sector, as
public health is a critical field of medicine that cannot be ignored in healthcare
policy formulation, community medicine, disease surveillance, emergency
preparedness & outbreak response, healthcare financing, and so forth. However,
a thorough examination of the consequences of the defection (Japa) of many
hitherto hospital-based Nigerian medical doctors to the public health space,
abandoning critical in-hospital services such as medical consultations,
surgical interventions, accident & emergency response, and birth deliveries,
may unveil the fire we are stoking. Shall we all drift to public health at the
expense of clinical practice? Are there suggestive remedial steps? Yes.
First,
let’s follow the data; I recommend that the Federal Ministry of Health conduct
a survey among Nigerian medics to determine how many have abandoned poorly
remunerated clinical services for better-paying public health jobs, and that
the study be objectively tailored to elicit the rate of defection, determinants
(monetary and non-monetary), and other essential information. I noted non-monetary
because, for instance, someone once mentioned to me that the repetition of poor
infrastructural state of doctors’ call rooms, lying-in wards, hospital toilets,
and so forth across the three General hospitals (secondary care facilities)
where he had worked was his push to a public health career where he now sits in
an air-conditioned office alongside other comfortable working conditions. Furthermore
on strategic information use, it may be helpful that an analysis is conducted
on the enrolment pattern for medical postgraduate training over the past ten
years to determine the proportion of medical doctors in training who flood the
public health & community medicine field compared to those who opt for other
specialist fields (such as internal medicine, surgery, radiology, paediatrics, Obstetrics
& Gynaecology).
Secondly,
I recommend that the MDCN desist from bulk-labelling the number of medical
doctors in the country during its routine data-sharing sessions, as such
practices obscure reality and create a false impression of the depth of the
emigration crisis among doctors. This write-up notes that the emigration of
Nigerian physicians is not only international (from Nigeria to other countries)
but also inter-practice (from clinic care to public health). Therefore, MDCN
will do justice to creating a sense of urgency by disaggregating to the hearing
of the Federal, State & Local government authorities, the number of doctors
who work within the hospitals and those who are preoccupied with varied out-of-hospital
works of epidemiology, healthcare administration & regulation, policy implementation,
emergency response, health economics, strategic information, etc.
Thirdly,
I recommend that the federal, state, and local government authorities make
concerted efforts to significantly improve the emoluments of frontline medical
doctors (those working in hospital settings to offer direct patient care) to be
at par with the average donor-funded “living” wages accruable to their public
health counterparts (those who work outside hospital settings). This will
significantly curtail the trend of seeking to quit the perceived impoverishing
hospital work for a rewarding public health career, all for the pay.
In
summary, this written prompt aims to prevent a potential future scenario in
which a significant proportion of the few medical school graduates who have no Japa
plans will, from the outset, transition to public health, leaving a substantial
number of our hospitals uncrewed by the frontline medical doctors needed in
clinical settings. Let those with ears hear.
Dr. Adetolu Ademujimi is a Medical
Doctor, Health Finance Specialist, Author, Reformer, Coach, Public Policy
expert, and social entrepreneur who can be reached in Abuja via adetoluademujimi@gmail.com

God bless you for this write-up. However, may I tell you that it's not only in medicine that this is common. Most undergraduate nurses are either planning to japa for better and greener pasture where, according to them, you work and get paid for the work you do or quickly go for public health as a postgraduate course where you get better renumerated than staying at the hospital setting where you are less valued and poorly renumerated!
ReplyDeleteHow I wish your recommendations can be acted upon, but I see it as a long term goal to be achieved in Nigeria and health decadence in our country needs immediate and urgent attention.
ReplyDeleteSo much to learn from this !!! Thank you so dearly sir .
ReplyDelete