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Vcheng,
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Doctors are like millitary----it is like saying that the millitary won't go to war when he enemy comes knocking---milltary is on strike because of reasons so and so.
The govt has spent millions to teach these men and women----for specialized education---the doctors don't have any civil rights to go on strike.
Start hanging their leaders one by one---10 in the first hour and one after every 10 minutes----and then see who goes on strike.
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You men and women want to take back your country and bring sanity to it----that is the only way left.
This Pakistan doesnt deserve me
Maj (r) Usman Tahir
Friday, July 13, 2012 From Print Edition
My name is Dr Khan, I am 26 and a government officer of BPS 17 working in Lahore in the largest hospital of Asia. I stood second in the medical college entrance test, out of 40,000 people. I studied in King Edward Medical College, Lahores best. I graduated in 2010.
I have 16 gold medals in 12 subjects. The day I graduated, my father, a respectable medical consultant who also graduated from King Edwards, as did his own father, advised me to leave this country because doctors have no future here. I knew he was right, but like almost all of my friends, I decided to stay; for one thing, I didnt want to leave my parents.
I enrolled in a postgraduate training programme of surgery and started working. I worked 12 months, my duty hours were 110 hours per week and increased to 150 hours every third week (and there are a total of 168 hours in one week). Some weeks I barely even saw my mother, of whom I am very fond, but no matter.
Until last year I was paid Rs22,340 per month. That is exactly Rs50 for every hour of duty, but that was all right, because my dad is rich and I dont want for anything. My pocket money is four times my pay, but taking money from your father is humiliating, especially after all the work I put in: I couldnt even have afforded car fuel for all those trips to the hospital but for my fathers generosity.
Everyone doesnt have a medical consultant for a father, so last year we called a strike for better pay. Some doctors worked two jobs.
But after the governments reaction last year (I was fired, together with 4,400 other doctors) I had a change of heart. Frankly, this is what I thought: To hell with Pakistan and its people. I was bitter and I was wrong. In the end, the pay was increased by Rs15,000. As of last month my pay, after taxes, is Rs41,240: thats around Rs100 per hour.
We still have no defined duty hours, however. And would you believe it that more than 50 percent of the doctors work for free? (That is called an honorary job.) We have no promotion system: out of a total of 34,000 doctors in Punjab only 200 can hope to get Grade 17 to 20. Most never even receive a promotion.
This year we had a strike again. We wore black armbands and demonstrated peacefully. Four meetings were held and in all four meetings government representatives made promises they subsequently broke. After the fifth meeting, and fifth breached pledge, we decided to go on strike.
My heart is broken. I applied for training in America, and because of my academic records and the fact that I had passed three international exams with 99 percentile, I got my H1b work visa from the American Embassy within three days.
Two weeks ago I was offered a job at the Kingsbrook Medical Centre in New York. My initial pay is going to be more than what most industrialists make in a month. My flight is in 17 days, as I write this. I dont plan to come back.
Out of my class of 310, 159 were girls who got married and did not practice medicine. Only 23 lady doctors are working. Ninety percent of the males have all migrated, I was there at Minar-e-Pakistan with more than 20 friends. Another 18 of us are never coming back. I love Pakistan, but Shahbaz Sharifs Pakistan doesnt deserve me.
^I'm afraid someone wishing to pursue a medical career should be clear on one thing - that they will never accept money in exchange for their sevices.
This will make them never go on strike again for reasons of employment/benefits.
You cannot call doctors messiahs, and treat them like criminals raiding their hostels and arresting them. You have to treat them with the dignity and respect that their title deserves before expecting them to behave like messiahs.
First of all doctors are not God, they are professionals like engineers, architects, pilots etc. We seem to 'respect' them because it is linked directly with our life.
They have right to strike as everybody else, it is govt's job to make a system that is not impacted seriously due to strike.
May be govt should look into promoting private hospitals as well.
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Docotrs are people too and they have issues as well---................
^^^ Dude, get off your high horse. Its not doctors alone that faces scum bags of the society on a daily basis. For God sake a manager of the MS plant was burnt to death..Compared to that this is nothing.
well said brother.............Hi,
I was thinking of writing about the strike of the pakistani doctors just recently----I wanted to write that the doctor leaders behind this strike should be summarily executed and hanged---.
I took too much time---just felt the pain and didnot write anything----till about a couple of hours ago when it hit close to home---very close---.
I was visitng my sister this evening and my mother mentioned that one of my first cousins suffered n attack of extremely high blood pressure----there were no doctors available to see her to prescribe any medication---because they were on strike---she died the same day of brain hemorrhage.
In soviet union and china---these doctors would have been executed by the firing squad---in the u s fo a---they would have faced jail sentence for dereliction of duty---in the lawless lands of pakistan---nobody gives a sh-it----because they are ready building the c41 systems to counter other enemies---but don't know how to fix the malaise that is effecting the nation.
I feel sad for my little cousin sister---she had lived a very hard life---as a young child she developed an abcess on her hip---her mother and my aunt was careless----it grew so big that it ate up a lots of flesh---my aunt could have informed my father or other of her cousins who were doctors but no---thick headed that she was---a true pakistani my aunt---my cousin---she walked with a severe limp all her life---in the end---she just could not even get the basic medical service to save her life----.
The world so harsh to her right from childhood to the day she died----for a female---to live with a limp in a pakistani society is a battle in itself---even in an educated family.