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Friday, April 26, 2024

Marcos calls for a check on brain drain in Southeast Asia, notably in healthcare

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President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said on Thursday that Southeast Asian countries must adjust and find ways to address human capital flight particularly in the healthcare sector for the benefit of the region.

The issue on brain drain in the region’s health sector, particularly the emigration of nurses and doctors, was discussed during the President’s meeting with Temasek Foundation executives at Malacañang.

“We are very proud of [our nurses and doctors] and the role they play during the height of the pandemic. But as I said, we are a victim of our own success,” the President Marcos told the Temasek officials led by chairperson Jennie Chua Kheng Yeng.

“But you know, we have to adjust and find other ways. We have to give them at least equal opportunities at home. It is very clear that most Filipino overseas workers are willing to take less in terms of pay so long as they can stay here,” the Chief Executive said.

Mr. Marcos also said that if Singapore can find a solution to the brain drain problem, it would immensely help the Southeast Asian region’s healthcare sector.

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Yeng said the Singapore nursing association has agreed to register nurses in the city state to arrest human capital flight in the sector after the country lost 400 nurses to New Zealand, which offered permanent residency as an added attraction.

Under New Zealand’s permanent residency program, the nurses can bring their families with them, allow their children to go to local schools, and apply for housing.

The Temasek Foundation International chair said Singapore does not want to give Filipino nurses citizenship unlike what is being offered by the United States, Canada, and New Zealand so they can go back and forth during their working years.

Yeng also commended the Philippines for producing good nurses and doctors, adding that Singapore’s emergency room doctors were mostly Filipinos, and praised their training based on life experience.

Temasek Foundation, a Singapore-based non-profit philanthropic organization, is a subsidiary of Singapore’s state sovereign fund Temasek Holdings.

The foundation funds and supports programs aimed at building community capabilities in Asia and beyond through philanthropic endowments.

The foundation forged agreements with the Philippines to enhance competencies across industries, through the Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) (Digitalization and Industry 4.0) Program, Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) with Design Thinking Program, and Health Care Management Program.

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