ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Self-financing medical education in Nepal
V Manickavel
Developing countries face problems with special ethical
implications. This paper will discuss one such problem, that of health care
allocation.
The improvement in a society’s health is attributed in part to
modern medicine. However, such medicine tends to be expensive. All over the
world, the availability of modern health services depends on the amount
allocated for them out of a country’s disposable income. The proportion of a
country’s gross national product allocated for health care has a bearing on the
population’s longevity and other indicators of its health.
One significant determinant of the availability and use of medical
technology is money. Public investment in the sectors of education and health is
becoming scarce as government policies divert funds to other areas seen as
priorities (for example, expensive weapons in the name of defence activities).
Moreover, inefficient tax collection procedures result in developing countries
collecting less income tax from individuals and business. As a result of all
these factors, health and education in these countries are given low priority,
leading to poor health and high illiteracy in the community.
Costs of training
An essential aspect of
establishing modern medicine in poor countries is training which enables the
transfer of medical technology to the community. However, the cost of training
in modern medicine is prohibitive, benefiting only a selected few from
privileged and wealthier sections of society. Training these people has limited
value because many of them look for entry into a wealthy country,and leave the
country where they were trained at considerable cost. This is one reason why it
is critical to extend medical education beyond the wealthy to reach poorer
sections of society, whose people who are more likely to serve their own
communities.
Limited public resources have prevented the subsidised training of
people from less- advantaged groups in poor countries. Yet this is exactly where
the training is most urgent. A compromise measure is to permit private
investment in sectors like health and education.
However, private investors are interested only in the returns on
their investments. There is also the problem of maintaining high standards of
medical education and the associated health care facilities, in private
institutions.
One country which is trying to solve this problem - training more
medical personnel who will serve domestic needs - is Nepal, with a per capita
health care allocation below $3, and one doctor for every 23,899 people.
The first medical institution in Nepal was set up by His Majesty’s
Government with aid from the Japanese government. A second autonomous medical
school was established with the help of Indian government aid. Both medical
colleges are staffed by Indian doctors at present. It is expected that trained
Nepali doctors will gradually replace the Indian faculty.
Self-financing medical colleges
In order to speed
up the process, and to tackle the future financial burden of running these
institutions, His Majesty’s Government took a decision to permit self-financing
medical institutions. These medical colleges will receive no government aid.
They are to build their own infrastructure, which includes a large,
self-sufficient hospital, equipped with modern technology. Various government
committees will monitor and enforce internationally developed standards for the
facilities and education - space, faculty, syllabus and so on - offered by these
medical colleges.
Government control
While the committees will not
regulate the fee structure of these self- financing medical colleges, the
government will control the selection of 20 per cent of the student body. These
students, chosen on the basis of merit, will receive free medical education.
These self-financing medical colleges are required to have a
well-equipped and staffed 700-bedded hospital attached. It is expected that
these hospitals will benefit some 2,000 people at any given time, providing
medical treatment, preventive health counseling, and jobs for the local
population. Moreover, 30 per cent of the beds will be available free to local
people who cannot afford to pay, and an additional 10 per cent of the beds will
be provided at a concession to deserving patients. The set-up will benefit from
other allied, self-financing educational institutions such as for dentistry,
nursing and medical technology.
At present, there are six such colleges in Nepal, providing
education which meets the high standards set and enforced by local regulatory
bodies. They are also a source of income for the societies which run them. The
basic ethical issues here are: how does one make a profit without exploiting
another? Further, will this education benefit only the socially and economically
elite? The answer is that privately-financed medical colleges in Nepal make a
profit while also making education available to resource-poor sections of
society. Society as a whole benefits from the production of educated doctors.
How is this privately-financed system different from one which
opens the doors to multinational investment? The basic difference is that here,
key decisions are made by independent committees, with the involvement of
academic bodies, professional and local organisations connected with health and
education. The primary targeted benefit is not of an immediate nature. The
immediate economic benefit is only an off-shoot of the main development goal of
improving health care.
Distributive justice
In the absence of resources
to provide quality modern medical education, self-financing private
entrepreneurial medical colleges in developing countries do not compromise on
the principle of distributive justice. This type of establishment can enable a
country with limited resources to do justice to its citizens, giving a modern
medical education without spending valuable taxpayers’ resources. This may be
better than the traditional aid programme, since donors often dictate terms to
recipients. In this aid programme, the recipient dictates terms, and receives
aid in exchange for the entrepreneur’s personal benefit. The success of such a
programme depends on the strict enforcement of regulations.
The basic difference from a traditional aid programme is that
here, the donor is a private agency and gets profits directly. However, the
recipient is able to dictate the conditions of his/ her benefit, thus avoiding
exploitation. In traditional aid programmes, the receiver is always controlled
by donors’ conditions. While most of these conditions may be ethical, they
sometimes intrude into one’s autonomy. This intrusion could be because of a lack
of understanding of the culture or because the donor wants to foster dependence
from the recipient. On the other hand, the recipient may be forced to accept
this dependent status in order to obtain aid for development. Such serious
ethical constraints will not occur in the case of self- financing education.
One objection that may be raised to self-financing education is
that benefits or profits are given to individual entrepreneurs. In traditional
aid programmes, too, profits are channeled, though indirectly, to entrepreneurs
through a public agency, either government or nongovernmental. The direct
receipt of benefits in entrepreneurial aid programmes is more transparent. This
transparency enables the recipient to see the aid not as charity but as an
indirect economic stimulant to business enterprise in the host country.
Furthermore, in the case of medical education, the long-term benefits go to
local students, who could not otherwise have afforded medical education. These
students are most likely to stay and serve the community. Further, the 30 per
cent requirement of beds for the local poor will provide modern medical services
free to the community.
Finally, how is this system to avoid the problem common in all
developing countries, of corruption in the monitoring procedure? It is expected
that the fact that many agencies are involved in the monitoring procedure, and
can check one another, will increase public accountability. Reports of
monitoring should be made available for public auditing. Most important, the
monitoring committees must receive proper education on the monitoring procedure
including the consequences of contravening it. As medical education directly
affects the future health status of a nation, this monitoring should be
considered a moral responsibility of the highest order by committee members.
References:
1.Korten David: Getting to the twenty- first
century: a global agenda.
2.His Majesty’s Government of Nepal: Nepal annual
budget: 1996- 97. Finance ministry report. His Majesty’s Government of Nepal:
3.Statistics yearbook: 1991.
4.Singer Peter: Practical ethics. Cambridge
University Press, 1979.
V. Manickavel,
Professor of Immunology, College of Medical Sciences, Nepal, Kathmandu
University, P. O. Box 23, Bharatpur, Chitwan DT, Nepal
Part of this paper
was presented at the UNESCO Asian Bioethics Conference, November 4- 8, 1997,
Kobe/ Fukui, Japan.
Report
Workshop on rational use of drugs
Irrationality of
various kinds in the use of drugs has almost become the rule in India. In this
context, a recent workshop on the subject was of particular value. The
department of health and family welfare, West Bengal, discussed various aspects
of the subject in a two- day workshop organised by the School for Tropical
Medicine in collaboration with the Foundation for Health Action. The meeting was
funded by WHO/ India Essential Drugs Programme.
The workshop, held at the Institute for Health and Welfare, Salt
Lake, Calcutta, on April 9 and 10, 1999, was attended by teachers of different
medical colleges and specialist medical officers and administrators of several
hospitals of the sate. The workshop took the following issues up for discussion
with regard to government hospitals: a review of the use of drugs; identifying
the factors responsible for irrational use of drugs; the role of a limited drug
list; and the role of unbiased drug information in RUD in government hospitals
including the state’s medical colleges. An action plan was drawn up at the end
of the workshop.
Readers may write to the Bulletin on Drug and Health Information
(254 Lake Town, Calcutta 700 089) for copies of the proceedings.
(Extracted from BODHI, 1999 May- June; VI (2): 34).