Public health crisis deepens as many doctors leave Sri Lanka

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Public health crisis deepens as many doctors leave Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka’s public health service has sharply deteriorated over the past year as President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s government imposes its International Monetary Fund (IMF) austerity program on the masses. In response, thousands of doctors have left Sri Lanka.

In fact, nearly 10 percent of the island’s medical professionals, including over 1,700 doctors, have migrated from the country over the past two years and the understaffing crisis is poised to worsen.

Sri Lankan government medical officers protest outside the national hospital in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Thursday, April 7, 2022. [AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena]

On June 21, the Government Medical Officers Association (GMOA) warned that 5,000 doctors, or 25 percent of the 20,000 doctors in government health institutions, have sat the necessary exams to seek employment abroad. This includes specialists in emergency medicine, anaesthesia, pediatrics, psychiatry, neurology, and cardiac surgery—almost 400 in total—in the past two years.

GMOA spokesman Dr. Chamil Wijesinghe recently told the media that the migration of doctors would become a “huge problem” for the country’s health sector. He said it had already impacted the National Hospital of Sri Lanka (NHSL), located in Colombo and the largest in Sri Lanka, and on the rural hospital system, forcing patients “to sometimes travel hundreds of kilometres to get their surgeries done.”

At least two main hospital units were completely closed last year due to the lack of medical staff. These included the professorial paediatric ward at the Anuradhapura Teaching Hospital because four paediatricians resigned and left the country; and the surgical unit at Mullaitivu Hospital in the Northern Province because it had no surgeon.

Lahiru Prabodha Gamage, 35, now a senior house officer for Britain’s National Health Service (NHS), told Al Jazeera on June 20, “No matter how much money I earned, I had to pay back huge loans” and therefore had no choice but to leave. Gamage said that his basic monthly salary was 64,000 rupees ($US213) and with overtime, he could earn around 220,000 rupees, but after loan repayments and other costs he was left with only 20,000 rupees.

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