All Omani general practitioners have jobs, says Minister of Health

Oman Saturday 15/June/2019 19:56 PM
By: Times News Service
All Omani general practitioners have jobs, says Minister of Health

MUSCAT: No Omani qualified to be a general practitioner is jobless, as medical facilities in the Sultanate are able to absorb demand for these jobs, according to Dr Ahmed Al Saidi, the Minister of Health.
The minister added that while the public sector works to Omanise jobs in government facilities, the private sector needs to put in more effort to provide jobs for Omanis, as the current Omanisation rate among general practitioners in the private sector’s health facilities does not exceed 5 per cent.
Al Saidi’s comments came during a meeting he held with the Medical Committee of the Shura Council, during which the minister discussed the ministry’s work and the current challenges
facing them.
The main topic of the meeting was the ministry’s plans to Omanise jobs in the medical field’s primary and secondary positions over the next five years.
When asked by the Shura Council members about medical college graduates seeking jobs as General Practitioners in Oman, the Shura Council reported: “The Minister of Health indicated that there is not a single Omani general practitioner graduate that has not been absorbed or trained. The ministry works to absorb those who graduate in medical and to provide them with training opportunities.”
Shura Council members explained that there are other medical professions for which this is not the case, such as assistant-oriented medical professions and dentists, but that medical facilities in Oman are able to absorb all Omani general practitioner .
The Minister added that Omanisation levels in the field of consultant doctors have reached 64 per cent and that Omanis make up 39 per cent of General Practitioners in the medical field, while expats make up 61 per cent.
According to the Ministry of Health’s report for the fourth quarter of 2017: “33 per cent of General Practitioners are Omani and 54 per cent of Consultants are Omani. while In the public sector, 42 per cent of practitioners are Omani while 59 per cent of consultants are Omani.”
The minister also spoke about the difficulties of funding the ministry, and how specific funds should be allocated to finance it.
According to the Shura Council’s statement, the minister highlighted “the necessity of establishing an investment fund to be supported by taxes on non-medical goods and services to help fund the Ministry’s budget.”
During the session, extensive discussions were held on various health issues, including the demand to strengthen medical services in the various governorates of the Sultanate and to review the fees imposed on some health services in private health
institutions.
The members of Shura Council appealed to the ministry to intensify the control of the standardization of the purchase of medicines in all health institutions in the Sultanate and to monitor the quality of medications that are prescribed in various public and private health institutions.