Govt must tackle ‘inhumane’ working conditions of doctors: Penang exco

4 May 2022 • 2:20 PM MYT
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Govt must tackle ‘inhumane’ working conditions of doctors: Penang exco

GEORGE TOWN – Penang government leaders have taken to social media to express their concern over the tragedy that befell a Penang Hospital houseman who died suddenly due to a “fall” from a building.

With allegations arising of tough working conditions and harsh treatment meted out by seniors on junior doctors, they are asking the Health Ministry (MoH) to look into the matter of ensuring better working conditions at public healthcare facilities.

The young doctor apparently fell from an office building in Jalan Datuk Keramat and police have classified the case as sudden death.

This is the second reported death of a junior doctor at the hospital in less than two years.

Penang health executive councillor Dr Norlela Ariffin said she hopes the state health department’s deputy director and the state psychiatry authorities will shed more light on the case – as well as on the working experiences of doctors at Penang Hospital and facilities elsewhere in the state – after Hari Raya Aidilfitri celebrations are over.

She added that she sent The Vibes’ report yesterday on the death of the houseman to Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin, MoH administrators and Pakatan Harapan’s health committee.

She lamented that she was doing this because the officials “don’t take this seriously enough”.

Dr Norlela stressed that she was raising concerns about “illogical, inhumane working hours” faced by housemen in view of the experience of her own family member in Malaysia which employees in other sectors would never be subjected to.

“She experienced 27 accidents because she was extremely tired and Alhamdulillah survived. Her friend died,” said Norlela, who is PKR’s assemblyman for Penanti.

‘Rite of passage’ used as an excuse

Dr Norlela also recalled a previous incident where another doctor killed himself.

“But the response I get from MoH administrators, including politicians, is that all doctors have to go through this rite of passage. It’s like an accepted culture in the medical profession,” she said.

“Since my daughter-in-law has worked for almost three years at the trauma ICU of a hospital in the UK, she’s so, so much happier with the humane work-life conditions,” she said on Facebook today.

She took the authorities to task for attributing the problem of overwork to inadequate manpower while many medical graduates cannot get positions and are forced to wait for a long time for work.

“It does not make sense for MoH to allow this to go on when doctors need to make life-and-death decisions while treating patients in this kind of working condition,” she said.

In December 2020, The Vibes reported that another doctor who had resigned from the same hospital had died suddenly.

The incident triggered an outcry among his colleagues, who wanted the authorities to seriously look into the matter instead of dismissing it as a “common” issue. – The Vibes, May 4, 2022

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