Rank: Elder Joined: 4/22/2010 Posts: 11,522 Location: Nairobi
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quicksand wrote:famooz wrote:@ quicksand,I do not agree with you. The docs should go back t work,and yes ,there is a human face to this. And for them to claim they are not working because of lack of equipments and all is just lame. We all know that most docs run their clinics. And they will say that they do this to supplement the 'poor' pay. so how about they first stop stealing government time ((by extension tax payers money) do what they are supposed to do ,and then come up with a better strategy for the issues to be addressed. Heck,they can even address it with the next government if not this one.....warudi kazi and kwanza that stuff about trainee docs wanting to paid so much bake is absurd. @famooz ...in reply to your disagreeing with me ..doctors have a side in this too. The lack of facilities is a genuine problem, regardless of its use as a reason for the strike. Where you work you expect a desk, chair, working phone, stationery and computer perhaps? Another thing, not all doctors have clinics. I know a few who were my roommates back at the old UoN,..in the early years it is really hard graft. The doc may be sent to a far flung hospital to work there. It takes time to live, work and save enough to even start a practice. Consequently its only fairly senior doctors who have clinics, those recently graduated, anything from 1 to 7 years since qualifying don't have anything. In any case, I think it is a chicken-egg scenario, as in, would the doctor feel compelled to duck the govt hospital and run a clinic or do hours in a private hospital if they were well paid? You pay people well first, then enforce a performance contract. You have talked of a 'better strategy', which I have highlighted. What strategy is this? How come they haven't thought of it and made it work before? The minister has treated them contemptuously - even refusing to talk! This is a particularly sore point for me. How do you deal with such an entity? And why shouldn't this govt deal with this problem? Finally let me pose a question that should provoke some thought. If the KE govt was to source foreign doctors, how much do you think that would cost? Because by firing them, Nyong'o is engaging in dangerous brinkmanship ...like someone said earlier in this thread this tu young docs thought it was smooth sailing,you finish med school and the cash starts kamin thru,nice house,big car life is rosy but they have found its smthn else,guys who graduated earlier than them wamejijenga mbaya yet they joined campo together,conditions may be bad but its all about the benjamins,if their salaries get tripled kesho i dont think you will ever hear them talking about the bad working conditions,people are dying so that the doctors may have well padded deep pockets its appalling and distasteful,this is not in the best interest of the country when someone else is dying when you are in a position to give some assistance what goes around comes around remember,they werent forced to do medicine,wangefanya actuarial ama investment banking... possunt quia posse videntur
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