Berhan Yifru
Hwassa University, Medical faculty, P O Box 1560.
Ethiop Med J. 2008 Jan;46 Suppl 1:1-77.
Although the practice of western medicine in Ethiopia dates back to the time of King Libne Dengel (1520-1535), organized and sustainable modern medical practice started after the battle of Adwa (1896).
To review hospitals construction, medical doctors production and attrition, and to suggest alternative medical doctors retention mechanisms in the public sector and production scale up options.
In this article, 100 years Ethiopian modern medical history is revised from old and recent medical chronicles. Until December 2006 primary data was collected from 87 public hospitals. Much emphasis is given to medical doctors profile (1906-2006), hospitals profile (1906-2005), medical doctors to population and hospitals ratio (1965-2006), Ethiopian public medical schools 42 years attainment (1964-2006), annual attrition rate (1984-2006), organizational structure of medical faculties & university hospitals, medical doctors remuneration by the Ministry of Health (MOH), Ministry of Education (MOE), NGOs and private health institutions. This article also addresses the way forward from physician training and retention perspectives, multiple alternate mechanisms to increase physicians' motivation to work in government institutions and reveres the loss. Medical doctors production scale up option is also given much emphasis. Most data are presented using line and bar graphs.
Literature review showed that the first three hospitals were constructed in 1896 (Russian hospital), 1903 (Harar Ras Mekonnen hospital) and 1906 (Menelik II hospital). In 2005, 139 hospitals (87 public and 52 others) were reported. Remarkable hospital construction was done between 1935 and 1948, and recently between 1995 and 2005; however, in the latter case, private hospitals construction took the lions share. By the time MOH was established (1948), 110 Ethiopian and expatriate medical doctors were working, mainly in the capital, and 46 hospitals constructed. Physician number increment was very slow till 1980 at which time it started to get doubled every five years and reached peak (1658 medical doctors of all type) in 1989 in the public sector. As there was sharp increment in physician number, on the contrary, there was sharp decline in the last 15 years (1990-2006) to nadir 638 doctors in 2006 in the public sector. The last 25 years of Ethiopian modern medical history, in reference to physician number, forms a triangle with the lower and upper base 1980 and 2006, respectively. Since MOH of Ethiopia started registering health professionals with qualifications in 1987, 5743 (76.5% Ethiopian and 23.5% expatriate) medical doctors were registered for the first time. Out of these, 3717 were general practitioners. The three prestigious medical schools (Addis Ababa, Gondar, Jimma) were established in 1964, 1978 and 1984, respectively. Since establishment till 2006, about 3728 medical doctors were graduated with MD degree from the three medical schools. Addis Ababa university medical faculty alone graduated 1890 general practitioners (1964-2006) and 862 clinical specialists (1979-2006). In the 23 years period (1984-2006), the highest and lowest physician to population ratios in the public sector were found to be in 1989 (1:28,000) and 2006 (1:118,000), respectively. In 2006, the physician to population ratio in Amhara, Oromia and SNNPR regional states was computed to be 1:280,000, 1:220,000, and 1:230,000, respectively. The physician deficit analysis in the last 23 years in relation to the WHO standard for developing countries (1:10,000) revealed the lowest record at the national and regional states in the last 12-years. Average physician to hospital ratio in five regional states in December 2006 was 3.6 (Tigray), 4.3 (Amhara), 6.1 (Oromia) and 5.3 (SNNPR). As the December 2006 direct interview with 76 public hospitals outside Addis Ababa showed, there was no specialist in 36 hospitals and no doctor at all in 3 hospitals. Seven public hospitals located in big regional states' town took the lions share of medical doctors. In short, in December 2006, 80.3% of regional hospitals were equipped with 0-2 specialists of one kind, and in 48.7% there were 0-3 General practitioners. Highest medical doctors annual attrition rates (20%-54.3%) were found in 1991-1992, 1998, 2002-2006. In general, in 20 years period (1987-2006), 73.2% of Ethiopian medical doctors left the public sector mainly due to attractive remuneration in overseas countries and local NGOs/private sectors. The number of postgraduate programme in Addis Ababa, Jimma and Gondar medical schools in December 2006 was 22, 12 and 3, respectively. The total number of fully employed academic staff of the medical schools in declining order was Addis Ababa 181, Gondar 118, Jimma 71, Hawassa 63 and Mekele 52: those with second degree and above being 97.2%, 35.6%, 90.1%, 55.6% and 15.4%, respectively. Currently (2006), there are about 416 clinical residents in 3 medical schools.
High annual attrition rate, fast population growth, governmental and nongovernmental health institution expansion, low production and increased postgraduate enrollment in the last 3-4 years contributed for extremely low physician-to-population ratio in Ethiopia. Although the Ethiopian government and private sector worked and achieved much on health infrastructure construction and midlevel health professionals training, it does not appear that medical doctors retention mechanisms are sorted out so far. As a result, even despite salary equivalent top up payments in some regions, more than 80% of public hospitals outside Addis Ababa were found ill-equipped with the most important human element--physicians. This implies that the push factors may not invariably correlate with remuneration.
It is high time that the government discusses the possible solutions among health professional associations/societies and other health stakeholders, and apply concrete medical doctors retention mechanisms before the public medical schools and hospitals dry off doctors. Among actions to be undertaken from the current Ethiopian perspective: providing land plot for physicians for residential house construction, giving priority to physicians in providing low cost houses, low interest or interest free loan for residential house construction and automobile procurement, allowing duty free automobile procurement, improving the fully employed academic staff taxation system, approving the different remuneration options proposed, adopting the other countries experience of dual employment to academic staff working in teaching hospitals, modifying the academic rank promotion based on year of training, for university hospitals either establishing hospital organizational structure in the Ministry of Education or letting them be under MOH, establishing joint appointment (mutual beneficiary) agreement between medical schools and local hospitals, directing donors and stakeholders to work on the line of reducing internal and external medical doctors brain drain, making independent MOH and higher institutions from Civil Service Agency are proposed as short term solutions. Retention as a strategy & production as a programme, medical doctors production scale up options are proposed as a long term solution to achieve physician to population ratio of 1:15,000. and 1:8,000 by the year 2015 and 2020, respectively.
尽管西医在埃塞俄比亚的实践可追溯到利布内·登盖尔国王时期(1520 - 1535年),但有组织且可持续的现代医疗实践始于阿杜瓦战役(1896年)之后。
回顾医院建设、医生培养与流失情况,并提出公共部门留住医生的替代机制以及扩大医生培养规模的方案。
本文从新旧医学编年史中梳理了埃塞俄比亚100年的现代医学史。截至2006年12月,从87家公立医院收集了原始数据。重点关注医生概况(1906 - 2006年)、医院概况(1906 - 2005年)、医生与人口及医院的比例(1965 - 2006年)、埃塞俄比亚42年的公立医学院教育成果(1964 - 2006年)、年流失率(1984 - 2006年)、医学院和大学医院的组织结构、卫生部(MOH)、教育部(MOE)、非政府组织及私立卫生机构支付给医生的薪酬。本文还从医生培养和留用的角度探讨了未来发展方向,提出了多种增加医生在政府机构工作积极性及减少流失的替代机制。同时也着重讨论了扩大医生培养规模的方案。大部分数据以折线图和柱状图呈现。
文献综述显示,前三家医院分别建于1896年(俄罗斯医院)、1903年(哈拉尔·拉斯·梅孔嫩医院)和1906年(孟尼利克二世医院)。2005年,共报告有139家医院(87家公立,52家其他性质)。1935年至1948年以及近期的1995年至2005年期间有显著的医院建设;然而,在后一时期,私立医院建设占了很大比例。卫生部成立之时(1948年),有110名埃塞俄比亚和外籍医生工作,主要集中在首都,已建成46家医院。直到1980年医生数量增长都非常缓慢,此后开始每五年翻倍,并于1989年在公共部门达到峰值(各类医生共1658名)。相反,随着医生数量急剧增加,在过去15年(1990 - 2006年)公共部门医生数量急剧下降,到2006年降至最低点638名。埃塞俄比亚现代医学史的最后25年,就医生数量而言,形成了一个三角形,下底和上底分别为1980年和2006年。自埃塞俄比亚卫生部于1987年开始登记有资质的卫生专业人员以来,首次登记了5743名医生(76.5%为埃塞俄比亚人,23.5%为外籍)。其中,3717名是全科医生。三所著名医学院(亚的斯亚贝巴、贡德尔、吉马)分别于1964年、1978年和1984年成立。自成立至2006年,这三所医学院共培养了约3728名拥有医学博士学位的医生。仅亚的斯亚贝巴大学医学院就培养了1890名全科医生(1964 - 2006年)和862名临床专科医生(1979 - 2006年)。在23年期间(1984 - 2006年),公共部门医生与人口的最高和最低比例分别出现在1989年(1:28,000)和2006年(1:118,000)。2006年,阿姆哈拉、奥罗米亚和南方各族州的医生与人口比例分别计算为1:280,000、1:220,000和1:230,000。过去23年相对于世界卫生组织针对发展中国家的标准(1:10,000)的医生短缺分析显示,在过去12年中,全国和各地区的短缺情况处于最低记录。2006年12月五个地区州的平均医生与医院比例分别为提格雷3.6、阿姆哈拉4.3、奥罗米亚6.1和南方各族州5.3。正如2006年12月对亚的斯亚贝巴以外76家公立医院的直接访谈所示,36家医院没有专科医生,3家医院根本没有医生。位于大地区州城镇的7家公立医院拥有大部分医生。简而言之,2006年12月,80.3%的地区医院配备了0 - 2名某一类专科医生,48.7%的医院有0 - 3名全科医生。1991 - 1992年、1998年、2002 - 2006年出现了最高的医生年流失率(20% - 54.3%)。总体而言,在20年期间(1987 - 2006年),73.2%的埃塞俄比亚医生离开了公共部门,主要原因是海外国家以及当地非政府组织/私立部门提供了有吸引力的薪酬。2006年12月,亚的斯亚贝巴、吉马和贡德尔医学院的研究生项目数量分别为22个、12个和3个。医学院全职学术人员总数从多到少依次为亚的斯亚贝巴181名、贡德尔118名、吉马71名、哈瓦萨63名和默克莱52名;拥有二级及以上学位的人员比例分别为97.2%、35.6%、90.1%、55.6%和15.4%。目前(2006年),三所医学院约有416名临床住院医师。
高年流失率、快速的人口增长、政府和非政府卫生机构的扩张、低培养量以及过去3 - 4年研究生招生人数增加导致埃塞俄比亚医生与人口比例极低。尽管埃塞俄比亚政府和私营部门在卫生基础设施建设和中级卫生专业人员培训方面付出了努力并取得了很大成就,但到目前为止,似乎尚未解决医生留用机制问题。结果,即使在一些地区有相当于工资的额外补贴,亚的斯亚贝巴以外超过80%的公立医院被发现配备不足最重要的人员要素——医生。这意味着促使医生流失的因素可能并不总是与薪酬相关。
政府早就应该与卫生专业协会/团体及其他卫生利益相关者讨论可能的解决方案,并在公立医学院和医院耗尽医生之前实施具体的医生留用机制。从埃塞俄比亚当前的角度来看,应采取的行动包括:为医生提供建房用地,在提供低成本住房时优先考虑医生,为建房和购置汽车提供低息或无息贷款,允许免税购置汽车,改进全职学术人员税收制度,批准提议的不同薪酬方案,采用其他国家对在教学医院工作学术人员的双重雇佣经验,根据培训年限修改学术职称晋升制度,对于大学医院,要么在教育部设立医院组织结构,要么使其隶属于卫生部,在医学院和当地医院之间建立联合任命(互利)协议,引导捐助者和利益相关者致力于减少国内外医生人才流失,提议卫生部和高等院校脱离公务员局作为短期解决方案。将留用作为一项战略,培养作为一个项目,提议扩大医生培养规模作为长期解决方案,以分别在2015年和2020年实现医生与人口比例为1:15,000和1:8,000。