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The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Kenkesh(f): 1:22am On Jan 09, 2016
THE AGONY OF UNEMPLOYED MEDICAL GRADUATES IN NIGERIA©

It is no longer news to the world and especially to Nigerians, the rate and vigour with which corruption in its different forms has invaded every facet of Nigeria's institutions. It seems to have become part of the genetic composition of most Nigerians if not all.

An aspect that inevitably affect youth develepmont and empowerment is worth discussing taking the medical sector which plays a critical role in nation building and economic development:

1) Collection of mandatory levy from applicants --- this usually happens before the submission of applications for job interview, jobs that the applicant is not sure he/she will get.

While the present government is planning to alleviate poverty by paying the unemployed youth some token for their upkeep, these employers - so called government workers and heads of institutions - set up their own wicked strategies to impoverish these unemployed teeming number of medical and health graduates by collecting huge sums from them before allowing them to sit for job interviews.This is so common most especially among the teaching hospitals in the western and south-eastern part of the country.

Just last year(2015), UCTH and UPTH collected N5000 from newly graduated doctors for their interview. The same year UNILORIN Teaching Hospital collected the same amount for the same reason of job interview, LASUTH charged the same amount. Many other hospitals did the same. Currently, Ekiti State Teaching Hospital is collecting N5000 (being the price of the application form) from these newly graduated medical doctors. Bear in mind that these fresh doctors have to do their one year mandatory internship programme. They have temporary licences and must do this within a limited time. They are entirely on their own and must compete with one another and with doctors trained abroad for the few placements available in the qualified hospitals.

These graduates will not only pay the mandatory fee, but will also risk their lives transporting themselves to the various venues of these interviews, lodge in hotels and cater for themselves etc. Where will they get funds and supports from knowing fully well that they are yet to start work, implying that the burden stil falls back to their parents and guardians who must have spent enormously in seeing them through medical school. Why do these MDs and CMDs, want to further impoverish the already poor young graduates before giving them their rightful placements? Is it what the Federal Government asked them to do? These question demand urgent answers!

2) The epidemic of I.M (ima mmadu OR to know somebody) in Nigerian employment system:

Merit is no longer recognised in the Nigerian employment system. After paying a heavy application fee, working hard to pass an the interview, you still are not sure of getting the job unless you know somebody or somebody who know somebody within the institution who can secure the job for you. For example, how can the best graduating students of reputable colleges of medicine go for interview at institutions different from their alma mater & not even one of the best ten graduating students get placements. You have to know some body before you can get a job. Those that don't know any body are automatically hopeless.

How can you explain the fact that someone re-sitting his final exams (ie he has not yet graduated, has no license and can not apply for internship) nevertheless participates in the job interview organized by his alma mater and gets a placement ahead of those that have graduated.

The situation is really discouraging hard work among youths, since hard work is no longer recognised. NAUTH has been delaying the list of succesful candidates, presumably because of the same reasons.

3) Buying of placements:
Here, the employer will collect application fees, conduct interviews, cast all the result of the interview into the waste paper basket and then commence the phase of auctioning the placements. Huge sums are unofficially/covertly collected from the employees before employing them. In UNTH and ESUTH, many have had to pay at least N150,000 and above before they could get housemanship . Is this part of the Youth Empowerment Programme?

4) Ghost workers in Nigerian employment system:

This particularly refers to a situation where an institution accredited and financially equipped to employ for instance 200 workers, decides to employ about 150. It then takes appropriate measures to secure the salary of the other 50 for the boss' pocket.

Ghost workers exist almost everywhere in Nigerian institutions. Take the case of UNTH that is budgeted to employ/train 180 house officers, but only employs about 120-125, with about less than half of them being their own graduants while the rest are abroad-trained doctors who heavily lobbied themselves into the system.
This creates artificial scarcity of jobs, making it difficult and impossible for all the graduates to promptly do their mandatory one year internships. Just as happens during artificial fuel scarcity, these wicked MDs and CMDs enrich themselves grossly from these situations.

Another phenomenon probably unique to medical internships is the possibility of doing the internship more than once. The salary is attractive and there is lack of nationally centralized control over the internship programme. With the appropriate corrupt means at the individual's disposal, he/she can get a fresh placement in a different hospital and can do multiple internships. This obviously denies fresh graduates their rightful placements.

It is clear that our senior colleagues, our leaders, our fathers and our elders in privileged positions are the very ones frustrating the youths of this country.

What is happening in the medical sector is pitiable! The role of our CMDs is scandalous! The practice of young interns who block their unemployed colleagues from getting slots by doing internship over and over again to make more money is totally wicked and punishable by Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria(MDCN). The silence of MDCN on the ongoing mess is the height of negligence of duty to protect the profession from ridicule! Finally, the inability of young medical graduates to articulate their experiences and speak out to the authorities is an act of timidity. Evil thrives when good men fail to speak up! I just weep for our corrupt generation.

Let this serve as a clarion call to all individuals and agencies capable and responsible for looking into matters such as these to come to our rescue.

Thanks. God bless Nigeria

60 Likes 11 Shares

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by oyeludef(m): 1:45am On Jan 09, 2016
So unemployment also now affects medical practitioners? Am surprised to hear dis

33 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Cpumping(m): 1:55am On Jan 09, 2016
aswear im shocked.
so even doctors dey find work?
God abeg do and come.

37 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by autofreak2020(m): 1:56am On Jan 09, 2016
Cpumping:
aswear im shocked.

so even doctors dey find work?

God abeg do and come.

Hard to believe.

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You may want to join us.
www.nairaland.com/2850199/thread-tony-elumelu-enterprenuership-foundation#41761342
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by MEDOLAB: 2:27am On Jan 09, 2016
k
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by ALVA001: 2:38am On Jan 09, 2016
Even doctors? Ds thng sef reach una side.

1 Like

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Nobody: 3:12am On Jan 09, 2016
ALVA001:
Even doctors? Ds thng sef reach una side.
The SATURATION THEORY don reach our side oooo.
This is as a result of FAILURES of SUCCESSSIVE govts, over the years.

Imagine increasing the birds in your cage without increasing the dimension...

11 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by laitsy: 3:51am On Jan 09, 2016
It is not their fault, it is thoz ppl givn birth to children to serv their corrupt mind.
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by MIKOLOWISKA: 4:41am On Jan 09, 2016
EVILFOREST:

The SATURATION THEORY don reach our side oooo.
This is as a result of FAILURES of SUCCESSSIVE govts, over the years.

Imagine increasing the birds in your cage without increasing the dimension...
you know how many of una seniors don be part of these successive govt. what are you doing to change it

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Nobody: 4:42am On Jan 09, 2016
oyeludef:
So unemployment also now affects medical practitioners? Am surprised to hear dis
why won't it affect them? when the government cannot build enough hospitals, good clinic and other institutions that require medical professionals. since the places where a medical student will work after graduation is few, definitely they too will look for jobs and you know the competition is much, the man know man factor in Nigeria isn't helping matters.

11 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by oyeludef(m): 5:06am On Jan 09, 2016
2chainz:
why won't it affect them? when the government cannot build enough hospitals, good clinic and other institutions that require medical professionals. since the places where a medical student will work after graduation is few, definitely they too will look for jobs and you know the competition is much, the man know man factor in Nigeria isn't helping matters.
then that means things av really gone out of hand in dis country. Unemployment affecting doctors is really a strange thing to hear. Its better dey travel abroad to practice den

11 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by michaeadi(m): 5:45am On Jan 09, 2016
Dokita..... I feel your pains
Having spent a fortune for studies.... You now have re-spend nearly the same to get a job.... 9ja I hail
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:17am On Jan 09, 2016
This OP; stop all these nonsense u posting, to attract pity for u, it is totally uncalled for; all the issues u raiseed here holds no water @ all...
If u can pull urself tru med skool financially is it 5k, interview fee u can't pay? (dat I as well as u know, would have used such amount for drinks)... stop this nonsEnse...
The issue of MAN know Man, is a general problem in our nepotic environment, a reflection of a failed system, and 1 of our greatest challenge we as a country have refused to address... it happens everywhere...
Fighting for housejob space; Yes it happens, but u will definitely eventually get, it is [b]impossible [/b]for u to stay more than a year without getting an internship slot (stop deceiving the public kid)... getting a residency slot, is even more difficult, but the truth ; U'll eventually get, if u determined and really want to futher...

Modified...
I wonder why all d bashes? Anyway I only aired my honest and humble opinion (which i'm entitled to)
Anyway; its been a while. I did mine; guess things might have gotten worse...

I withdraw my comments... for those it hurt..

22 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Samgreguc(m): 6:34am On Jan 09, 2016
I was reading about a space for internship for Pharmacist in Ekiti and I was disappointed when I read they were to pay some kind of application fee.

3 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Saheed9: 6:59am On Jan 09, 2016
Funny enough, they already have their anointed candidates despite collecting application fees

2 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by KingTom(m): 7:13am On Jan 09, 2016
Saheed9:
Funny enough, they already have their anointed candidates despite collecting application fees
precisely, it is sad that it has to be this way now. But the way op put the 5k issue is wrong undecided No form is free whether you get it or not. Not everyone can be accepted

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Demmocrats(m): 7:33am On Jan 09, 2016
Kenkesh:
THE AGONY OF UNEMPLOYED MEDICAL GRADUATES IN NIGERIA©
It is no longer news to the world and especially to Nigerians, the rate and vigour with which corruption in its different forms has invaded every facet of Nigeria's institutions. It seems to have become part of the genetic composition of most Nigerians if not all.
An aspect that inevitably affect youth develepmont and empowerment is worth discussing taking the medical sector which plays a critical role in nation building and economic development:
1) Collection of mandatory levy from applicants --- this usually happens before the submission of applications for job interview, jobs that the applicant is not sure he/she will get.
While the present government is planning to alleviate poverty by paying the unemployed youth some token for their upkeep, these employers - so called government workers and heads of institutions - set up their own wicked strategies to impoverish these unemployed teeming number of medical and health graduates by collecting huge sums from them before allowing them to sit for job interviews.This is so common most especially among the teaching hospitals in the western and south-eastern part of the country.
Just last year(2015), UCTH and UPTH collected N5000 from newly graduated doctors for their interview. The same year UNILORIN Teaching Hospital collected the same amount for the same reason of job interview, LASUTH charged the same amount. Many other hospitals did the same. Currently, Ekiti State Teaching Hospital is collecting N5000 (being the price of the application form) from these newly graduated medical doctors. Bear in mind that these fresh doctors have to do their one year mandatory internship programme. They have temporary licences and must do this within a limited time. They are entirely on their own and must compete with one another and with doctors trained abroad for the few placements available in the qualified hospitals.
These graduates will not only pay the mandatory fee, but will also risk their lives transporting themselves to the various venues of these interviews, lodge in hotels and cater for themselves etc. Where will they get funds and supports from knowing fully well that they are yet to start work, implying that the burden stil falls back to their parents and guardians who must have spent enormously in seeing them through medical school. Why do these MDs and CMDs, want to further impoverish the already poor young graduates before giving them their rightful placements? Is it what the Federal Government asked them to do? These question demand urgent answers!
2) The epidemic of I.M (ima mmadu OR to know somebody) in Nigerian employment system:
Merit is no longer recognised in the Nigerian employment system. After paying a heavy application fee, working hard to pass an the interview, you still are not sure of getting the job unless you know somebody or somebody who know somebody within the institution who can secure the job for you. For example, how can the best graduating students of reputable colleges of medicine go for interview at institutions different from their alma mater & not even one of the best ten graduating students get placements. You have to know some body before you can get a job. Those that don't know any body are automatically hopeless.
How can you explain the fact that someone re-sitting his final exams (ie he has not yet graduated, has no license and can not apply for internship) nevertheless participates in the job interview organized by his alma mater and gets a placement ahead of those that have graduated.
The situation is really discouraging hard work among youths, since hard work is no longer recognised. NAUTH has been delaying the list of succesful candidates, presumably because of the same reasons.
3) Buying of placements:
Here, the employer will collect application fees, conduct interviews, cast all the result of the interview into the waste paper basket and then commence the phase of auctioning the placements. Huge sums are unofficially/covertly collected from the employees before employing them. In UNTH and ESUTH, many have had to pay at least N150,000 and above before they could get housemanship . Is this part of the Youth Empowerment Programme?
4) Ghost workers in Nigerian employment system:
This particularly refers to a situation where an institution accredited and financially equipped to employ for instance 200 workers, decides to employ about 150. It then takes appropriate measures to secure the salary of the other 50 for the boss' pocket.
Ghost workers exist almost everywhere in Nigerian institutions. Take the case of UNTH that is budgeted to employ/train 180 house officers, but only employs about 120-125, with about less than half of them being their own graduants while the rest are abroad-trained doctors who heavily lobbied themselves into the system.
This creates artificial scarcity of jobs, making it difficult and impossible for all the graduates to promptly do their mandatory one year internships. Just as happens during artificial fuel scarcity, these wicked MDs and CMDs enrich themselves grossly from these situations.
Another phenomenon probably unique to medical internships is the possibility of doing the internship more than once. The salary is attractive and there is lack of nationally centralized control over the internship programme. With the appropriate corrupt means at the individual's disposal, he/she can get a fresh placement in a different hospital and can do multiple internships. This obviously denies fresh graduates their rightful placements.
It is clear that our senior colleagues, our leaders, our fathers and our elders in privileged positions are the very ones frustrating the youths of this country.
What is happening in the medical sector is pitiable! The role of our CMDs is scandalous! The practice of young interns who block their unemployed colleagues from getting slots by doing internship over and over again to make more money is totally wicked and punishable by Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria(MDCN). The silence of MDCN on the ongoing mess is the height of negligence of duty to protect the profession from ridicule! Finally, the inability of young medical graduates to articulate their experiences and speak out to the authorities is an act of timidity. Evil thrives when good men fail to speak up! I just weep for our corrupt generation.
Let this serve as a clarion call to all individuals and agencies capable and responsible for looking into matters such as these to come to our rescue.
Thanks. God bless Nigeria


I understand your pain more than you know, its pathetic seeing others get juicy jobs because of IM.

1 Like

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by abumeinben(m): 7:33am On Jan 09, 2016
undecided

Doctors or all graduates...

Everywia una like preferential treatment...

The medical student wey welcome me to school during ma matric, na hin bid me bye bye when I do ma convocation.


But I pity them sha...but but must they do house job in teaching hospitals? What happens to other hospitals?

It's like when we dey find IT placement, every Engineering student wanted Chevron, total, MTN, Interswitch, GTBank, NNPC, SPDC, NPDC.....

At the end of 6 months, na only one month IT I did embarassed

8 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by brunofarad(m): 7:33am On Jan 09, 2016
Pathetic
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by NobleAngell(f): 7:33am On Jan 09, 2016
D
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by franconian: 7:34am On Jan 09, 2016
Raymondenyi:
This OP; stop all these nonsense u posting, to attract pity for u, it is totally uncalled for; all the issues u raiseed here holds no water @ all...
If u can pull urself tru med skool financially is it 5k, interview fee u can't pay? (dat I as well as u know, would have used such amount for drinks)... stop this nonsEnse...
The issue of MAN know Man, is a general problem in our nepotic environment, a reflection of a failed system, and 1 of our greatest challenge we as a country have refused to address... it happens everywhere...
Fighting for housejob space; Yes it happens, but u will definitely eventually get, it is [b]impossible [/b]for u to stay more than a year without getting an internship slot (stop deceiving the public kid)... getting a residency slot, is even more difficult, but the truth ; U'll eventually get, if u determined and really want to futher...

Stop writing all these, nonsense and attracting a pity party for urself, it is totally uncalled for and unnecessary...


This nigga is very corrupt. There is no other reason why the brain of a sane human would synthesis such trash this early momo.


Bro #leavetrash4LAWMA

21 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Nobody: 7:34am On Jan 09, 2016
Pele
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by ultrazone(m): 7:35am On Jan 09, 2016
Business don take over.

2 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Nobody: 7:35am On Jan 09, 2016
Interesting....
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Rose2014: 7:35am On Jan 09, 2016
oyeludef:
then that means things av really gone out of hand in dis country. Unemployment affecting doctors is really a strange thing to hear. Its better dey travel abroad to practice den

Why won't unemployment affect them when our leaders go abroad to treat minor headache
Not only politicians sef, majority of Nigerians now go to India for medical treatment except those that can't afford it

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by chyckxx(m): 7:35am On Jan 09, 2016
Nigeria
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by oluseyiforjesus(m): 7:36am On Jan 09, 2016
I hardly see unemployed Medical doctor

5 Likes

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by donofdons: 7:37am On Jan 09, 2016
Nigeria have bastardized the greatest proffession in the world
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by frodobee: 7:38am On Jan 09, 2016
Maybe, who knows? Maybe this government will build six new National Hospitals like GEJ did with Universities.
#over to you Lai.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Ybnm4life(m): 7:38am On Jan 09, 2016
On a seriou note, I don't really want this monthly 5k approved by the govt for us graduates. I just hope this money can be put into our nigerian industries so as to create more employment for us.
Its better to show how to teach a man how to fish than to be giving him fish everytime he needs it... Just look at the rate of unemployment in Nigeria now and see what am talking about...

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by chimah3(m): 7:38am On Jan 09, 2016
Chaii! embarassed
Re: The Agony Of Unemployed Medical Graduates In Nigeria by Smartsyn(m): 7:39am On Jan 09, 2016
Hmmm

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