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Doctors' In Punjab Demand Khyber Pakhtunkhwa like Service Structure For Doctors' In Punjab Too

I have friends working in bhakkar for only 52k per month as MO.Dont you think they deserve more.
Well a fully qualified FCPS from the top medical college is starting at about 100K a month in private sector. During the FCPS, the hospitals don't pay any better. However, private sector, a job means overload of work. The government sector as opposed to that, is almost free lunch. So whenever you would ask any of them to apply for a private hospital, the most likely answer would be no. And you haven't seen any private doctor association protesting against tough schedule, because they know that if they think they are being exploited, the door is wide open. The low cost healthcare costs in public sector has to come at compromises. Otherwise without insurance cover, i won't think of stepping into a healthcare facility in developed world because quality healthcare is damn expensive even for the citizens of high income countries.
 
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It's a noble profession and must not be taken as business . At the same time govt should take reforms to address the issue .
 
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Punjab keeps beaurocracy at very low pays m that is why every institution is incompetatnt . there is no freedom within institutions
 
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It was a dimly lit corridor. Dirtied with empty food boxes and fallen hopes. Pigeons fluttering on the window sills, pecking on every decaying nibble they could find. The paint on the walls was rather the blood of the hospital’s year-end trail of patients. The flakes from the wall were falling off of them with no one to patch them up. Like the wounds on the arms and legs of patients waiting outside the medical wards.

It was a grave, odd world. A government hospital. A couple sitting on a sheet of cloth, with their child shivering and crying in the lap of his mother. Benches crawling with insects and the patients who could barely hold themselves. Whether someone sneezed, coughed or lost bladder control, he could only sit and wait.

Wait with the chimes of the wall-clock, the tick of the hour, for somebody to see them.

When it comes to the healthcare sector of Pakistan, we often neglect how one action can impact the continue reading: marham.pk/healthblog

It was a dimly lit corridor. Dirtied with empty food boxes and fallen hopes. Pigeons fluttering on the window sills, pecking on every decaying nibble they could find. The paint on the walls was rather the blood of the hospital’s year-end trail of patients. The flakes from the wall were falling off of them with no one to patch them up. Like the wounds on the arms and legs of patients waiting outside the medical wards.

It was a grave, odd world. A government hospital. A couple sitting on a sheet of cloth, with their child shivering and crying in the lap of his mother. Benches crawling with insects and the patients who could barely hold themselves. Whether someone sneezed, coughed or lost bladder control, he could only sit and wait.

Wait with the chimes of the wall-clock, the tick of the hour, for somebody to see them.

When it comes to the healthcare sector of Pakistan, we often neglect how one action can impact the continue reading: marham.pk/healthblog
 
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