Act now to stem silent exodus of our doctors

LocalPolitics
18 Apr 2026 • 8:09 AM MYT
The Sun Daily
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Only 10.5% of housemanship posts were filled this year as young doctors seek better prospects abroad, highlighting a deepening crisis in Malaysia’s healthcare system.

THERE is a quiet crisis unfolding in Malaysia’s hospitals and it is not about equipment shortages or bed capacity. It is about people – our young doctors, fresh out of medical school, quietly choosing to leave.

This should stop you cold: only 529 out of 5,000 housemanship spots offered this January were accepted. That is just 10.5%. Nearly 4,500 young Malaysians said no to starting their medical careers at home – not because they don’t love their country but because they don’t see a future here.

And Singapore? They are watching and they are ready. With starting packages of around S$110,000 (about RM385,000), plus permanent positions, pensions and clear career pathways, recruiters are already engaging students before they even graduate.

Our top medical schools are increasingly becoming feeder institutions for foreign systems. Why is this happening? Because our system keeps sending the wrong message: contract after contract, uncertainty after uncertainty. Young doctors are overworked, underpaid and undervalued.

Many burn out before they have even begun. Mentorship is limited, promotion pathways are unclear and there is barely a visible future to work towards. They are not asking for luxury; they are asking for dignity. Ending the contract system, which the Health Ministry is reportedly considering, would be a step in the right direction. But it is only that – a first step.

We need permanent posts, clear career pathways and real institutional support. Housemanship should not feel like survival; it should be a foundation for learning and growth.

We cannot outpay Singapore but we can compete on something deeper: respect, purpose and that their work matters and they matter too.

Young doctors want balance. They want recognition, opportunities to specialise, to research and to grow without being broken by the system. Public service should feel like an honour, not a trap.

Forcing them to stay through bonds will not solve the problem. We must also engage the thousands of Malaysian doctors already working abroad, creating return pathways, recognising overseas experience and allowing them to come home without losing ground.

Our doctors are not leaving because they are disloyal; they are leaving because the system keeps failing them. If we do not act now, the outflow will continue.

K.T. Maran
Seremban