The East African Standard (Nairobi)

Kenya: New Brain Drain Threat Looms

Harold Ayodo

6 May 2008


Nairobi — Scientists have warned of a looming exodus of health experts from Kenya and other African countries to meet demand in the West.

Medical experts attending a conference at Kisumu's Great Lakes University said the US and the UK had new health care programmes that needed expatriates.

Prof David Sanders, the Dean of the School of Public Health at the University of West Cape, South Africa, said the US needed close to a million nurses.

"The UK needs 10,000 more doctors and 20,000 nurses, mostly from Africa because they are cheaper," Sanders said.

Developed countries save Sh11.5 million in training costs for each professional if the same expertise was exported from Africa.

The researchers said most nurses from Kenya sought greener pastures in the West and Far East due to better pay and work conditions.

The experts heard that increasing poverty and inequality, made worse by inequitable globalisation, was among the causes of the health crisis in Africa.

"Selective primary health care and inappropriate reforms in the continent are our undoing," Sanders said.

He spoke when he presented a paper, Human Resource Crisis in the Health Sector: A Challenge for Africa, at the Fifth Annual Tropical Institute of Community Health and Development in Africa.

The three-day conference has drawn scientists from Africa, Asia, US and UK.

"Africa is a net exporter to the rich world and a huge borrower of colossal amounts of money for developing health care," Sanders said.

He said African governments should offer better pay to medical personnel and invest on postgraduate training for better services.

Sanders regretted that many studies in Africa were negative towards structural adjustment and effects on health outcomes.

"Africa spends more on debt servicing each year than on health and education. Drawing poor countries into the global economy could address fundamental aspirations," he said.

Sanders said Sub-Saharan Africa was the only region in the world where the number of people living in abject poverty doubled between 1981 and 2001.

"Figures from the World Bank show that 313 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa (half the population) live below a dollar a day," he said.

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Read comments. Write your own.

Author: putdown08
Tue May 6 15:34:26 2008

We have nurses who are not employed let them go and better themselves. Lets have has many expertriates all over europe. Last year they brought more than us@800,000 in kenya. If we experience any shortage let the retired continue working.

Author: Wachira
Tue May 6 22:25:13 2008

Very difficult situation.... one can't fault the individuals who are mostly trying to feed their families back in Africa. I, for one, am a vice president at an american business and speak a little swahili and would JUMP at the chance to come work in Kenya!

Author: hess80
Sat May 17 22:01:13 2008

I´m a latin american doctor, this trend in africa is now seen in south america, but it´s just beginning there is a lot of doctor unemployed, and wages are really low, since a hairdresser can make almost as much money as a newly graduated doctor (who in most cases are young like 22 to 26 years old) For example I´ll be moving out to spain for work, wining almos 8 times as much money than here in my country. I guess in africa it´s very similar, since we doctors are really well prepared (for example most of my class mates… [Read Full Text]


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