Medical crisis looms as dearth of specialists worsens

23 June 2023 09:42 am Views - 217

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By Sheain Fernandopulle  

Sri Lanka is currently experiencing a massive shortage of  medical specialists, with medical professionals warning of a serious  threat to the country’s health sector, the Daily Mirror exclusively  learns.   

With a significant number of medical specialists choosing  to migrate, and some specialists being absorbed to foreign universities,  experts predict more trouble for Sri Lanka’s ailing health sector.  Meanwhile, the recently revised retirement age of doctors by the age 60,  has also contributed to the issue.   


The Ministry of Health has estimated that the country will  require 4,299 medical specialists by the year 2024 to ensure continued medical services to the general population. According to the  list of transfers, there are 750 vacancies to be urgently filled by this  year including cardiologists, microbiologists, dermatologists,  emergency physicians, anaesthetists and pathologists. Professionals in  the field have long warned that the number of required medical  specialists could exceed the 1,000 mark by next year, if authorities  failed to act promptly.   
However, Sri Lanka currently has only around 2,007  specialists, a number which many experts say is inadequate to serve the  general population’s medical needs. Adding to the issue is the imminent  retirement of some 300 medical specialists aged between 60 to 63 by the  end of this year, including experts like Dr. Ananda Wijewickrama, Dr.  Lakkumar Fernando, Dr. Gotabaya Ranasinghe, Dr. Ananda Lamahewage and Dr.  Nishshanka Jayawardena.   


Meanwhile, nine out of 18 heart surgeons in the country are  likely to leave the service, risking the closure of several heart surgery  units in the country. These include some specialized units in Colombo,  Galle, and Jaffna, risking the lives of thousands of people who are on  the waiting list for heart surgeries. Furthermore, 375 medical  specialists have migrated for either professional or personal reasons,  while others have been absorbed into universities.  


Furthermore, the Health Ministry is accused to have continuously delayed to publish the transfer list.   


It is in this context that 176 specialist doctors have  filed a petition in the Court of Appeal saying that it is unfair to  change the retirement age privilege from 60 to 63. Health authorities  are currently deliberating if a flexible work arrangement could be given  in the case of some experts. However, it was reported that the affected  experts were not in agreement with this solution, urging the retirement  age be revised to 63.  


In this context, the authorities have verbally requested  about 50 specialist doctors over the age of 63 to continue working on a  temporary contract basis.