Star: KUALA LUMPUR: General practitioners should re-engineer themselves in light of stiff competition from government and private hospitals and rapid medical science development, the Malaysian Medical Association (MMA) said.
Its president Dr David Quek, in his column in the latest MMA bulletin, said the role of general practitioners was increasingly depreciated and marginalised and they were “a marked and endangered species teetering on the brink of extinction.”
Doctors, he said, should realise that times and medical practice had changed and they should look within themselves to re-engineer their modus operandi.
“General practitioners have to emerge from their cocooned complacency that simply serving quietly and earnestly behind long hours of general practice would suffice. It will not,” he added.
Dr Quek said the MMA would assist general practitioners by organising a summit where all issues and their future challenges could be debated to prepare a comprehensive policy.
He said he hoped doctors in the public sector would also come forward to provide input for the betterment of the profession.
In the same bulletin, MMA member Dr H. Krishna Kumar said 4,000 new doctors were joining the profession every year and this posed great competition to private practitioners.
Another source of competition was the improvement of services provided by government hospitals, where there were now more locums to man the accident and emergency departments, thus reducing waiting time, he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment