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Editorial | Opening Hong Kong’s medical door will not compromise quality

  • City is now allowing graduates from the world’s top medical schools to apply for jobs as doctors in the city’s public hospitals.
  • It is an initial and necessary step to shortening chronically long waiting times for even the most basic treatment

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A plan to hire graduates from the world’s top medical schools aims to bring relief to Hong Kong’s manpower-starved hospitals. Photo: David Wong

Hong Kong is eyeing graduates from many of the world’s top medical schools to take up jobs as doctors in its manpower-starved public hospitals. How many from the first batch of 27 will be attracted is a matter of wait-and-see.

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But it is an initial and necessary step to shortening chronically long waiting periods and queues for even basic treatment. With time and experience, the process will be broadened and requirements perhaps even modified to ensure the best possible healthcare for the most needy in our fast-ageing society.

The city’s medical profession long objected to opening doors to outsiders, contending standards would be lowered if local licensing examinations were not passed. But ever-lengthening waiting times, compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic, prompted authorities to step in and lawmakers approved changes last October.

The first list of schools from which graduates can apply for jobs that require working for at least five years in the public hospital system before being able to register for private practice includes the best in the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia and Singapore. It will also be a useful guide to students wanting to study overseas.

Hong Kong’s focus on Western medicine in the local hospital system makes for understandable choices. But the list has also raised questions why mainland China is not represented, an anomaly given a number of its medical schools rank among the best 100 in the world.

A government source’s belief that at least four will be included in subsequent rounds is heartening; thousands of Chinese doctors travel to Western countries each year to work, so there is no question many are capable of qualifying. There are differences to the two systems, but that can be remedied with orientation and training in local practices.

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