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Tough going for foreign-trained docs

Singapore will take only those doctors from India, Philippines and Myanmar who are graduates from recognised medical schools.

Updated on: Jun 16, 2007 01:48 PM IST
DPA | By , Singapore
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Doctors who are not graduates of recognised foreign medical schools, including those from India, will no longer be allowed to practice in Singapore starting next year, the health ministry said Saturday.

These physicians who come from countries like the Philippines, India and Myanmar have been serving as junior doctors.

The Singapore Medical Council has allowed institutions to hire them since 2000 to work on a short-term basis to ease the shortage of physicians.

The change will not affect those who are already in the city-state. As of last January, Singapore had 7,611 registered doctors including 2,286 trained in foreign institutions.

About 400 are either from unrecognised medical schools or on training stints.

"The intention is to bring in doctors from top-ranked schools to serve" in Singapore, The Straits Times quoted a ministry spokesman as saying.

Singapore is expanding the number of doctors trained in the city-state and increasing the list of recognised foreign medical schools from 20 in 2003 to 140 currently.

Doctors from unrecognised foreign schools who are in Singapore are being encouraged to obtain post-graduate qualifications.

 
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