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Young Doctors should work in Poorer Nations, says WMA President
A suggestion that all medical students and doctors in training
should be encouraged to have a minimum of one months "elective"
experience in one of the "poorer" nations of the world,
has been put forward by Dr James Appleyard, president of the World
Medical Association in a new year message to the WMA's 80 national
medical association members.
"Such experience will change their lives and enable them
to take on the challenging task of advocacy for the needs of the
poorer nations and promote positive changes in the future",
said Dr Appleyard.
He urged national medical associations to encourage medical students
and doctors in training to work in one of the world's poorer nations
as part of his new year wish for medical associations in the "developed
world to support their "sister"' associations in the
developing world".
"With the health divide between rich and poor nations widening,
there is an urgent need to try to bridge this gap - for the sake
of humanity, for the sake of medical progress and for the sake
of their economic growth. The World Bank has estimated that the
gap between the richer 20 per cent of nations and the 20 per cent
of poorer nations could be bridged if the burden of infectious
disease were lifted".
"Children bear the brunt of this burden. For the future
of all nations it is vital that their health needs are met. Healthy
children mean healthy and productive adults and economic progress."
Dr Appleyard said his two other wishes for the new year were:
- that national medical associations should create a worldwide
network of partnerships between themselves, governments, medical
schools and universities to increase the amount of research
on drugs for the "neglected" diseases, such as TB,
Aids and malaria;
- that national medical associations should check that their
Governments and institutions had placed the needs of children
at the centre of their development plans by addressing the principles
of the WMA's Declaration of Ottawa on the "Right of a Child
to Healthcare".
He said that physicians were one of the strongest advocates for
the health needs of the poor who were themselves spending all
their energy on just surviving.
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