Women doctors refusing to report to their workplace

2008-09-11

Some 100 married women trained in university hospitals in Rabat and Casablanca are refusing to serve in remote locations, following a government decision designed to ensure the provision of care in the regions.

By Sarah Touahri, for Magharebia in Rabat – 11/09/08

[Sarah Touahri] A group of married specialist doctors are protesting remote placements. Morocco's health ministry says they are needed to provide care in the regions.

A group of 100 new women doctors held a sit-in outside the health ministry on Tuesday (September 9th) to protest remote workplace assignments. Their refusal to honour their contracts has sparked a major debate in Morocco.

Trained as specialists in the university hospitals of Rabat and Casablanca, these women are married, and most of them have children.

A rule allowing graduates to be deployed within a 100-km radius of their marital homes has been replaced this year with a drawing system in order to put an end to shortages in the south and east.

The women, however, are demanding to have the old rule applied, with priority given to those who are married, rather than putting them on an equal footing with single people. The health ministry maintains that appointments should be made according to regional needs without taking anything else into consideration.

Doctor Abou El Ouafa Manal told Magharebia that the drawing was carried out in the absence of those concerned.

"While waiting for a dialogue to be opened up with the ministry, we were suddenly surprised to find that we were being deployed to regions far away, with no consideration for our family circumstances," she said. "We have children, and some are on the point of having babies."

The health ministry disagrees.

"Being a married woman is no reason for exemption from the new rule," the ministry's communications department said. "These women belong to a group of 327 newly-qualified doctors, 210 of whom have already reported to their workplace."

Without the new appointment system, the ministry says, there would be no hope of equal care provision across the whole of Morocco. The women in question have been given two years’ seniority bonus to give them a boost in their next appointment.

The ministry added the women protesting the new move will have to wait their turn, because other married women have been serving in remote locations such as Laâyoune for two or three years, and their relocations will be finalized before the new graduates' demands can be considered.

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"They have signed an eight-year contract to work for the ministry, and not necessarily near where they live," said the health ministry’s director of personnel affairs, Mohamed Kably.

"They can ask to be moved after a year," he added, saying that it is not possible to continue sending women only to the area between Casablanca and Rabat when needs exist in other regions.

Mohammed Ben Youssef, a member of the national health federation and of the General Union of Moroccan Workers (UGTM) told Magharebia that the unions cannot defend the position taken by the protesting doctors because other women doctors have been working for years in distant areas, far from their marital homes.

To defend their cause, the women have organised themselves into a collective. In what they say is the only definitive solution to the issue, they plan to press for the establishment of faculties of medicine and university hospitals across the various regions of the country.

This content was commissioned for Magharebia.com.
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Eng. Hasan Al-Bahkali Posted 2008-09-12

Medicine is a humanitarian profession. Society needs both male and female doctors especially in remote areas where adequate services are missing. The operation requires organization and regulating by ensuring justice to all. Men and women doctors are paid to serve society. Moreover, remote areas are a “fertile” ground for scientific research and study of untreatable medical cases. Engineer Hasan Al Bahkali.

Mourad Posted 2008-09-12

I think it is unacceptable that these doctors are demanding workplaces near their homes when there are dozens of doctors who have been waiting their turns in this cycle of change throughout the years.

amar Posted 2008-09-18

I find it unfathomable to assign married female doctors to posts far away from their husbands. This is either arrogance or ignorance on the part of the Moroccan administration. This affects a very large number of people. Not just five or ten, but 101 families are going to be dislocated and disturbed. Why close you eyes to this? Do you know how many problems this is going to create socially and materially? Do you know that these women will never have their body and soul in their workplace?

halioui Posted 2008-09-30

Hello, Have you already heard talk of the goings-on with the female medical specialists who are married and graduated in 2007? The Minister clearly announced that they, the married and single men and women, are all in the same boat. Equality!? The cities in the far reaches need doctors. I invite you to go to her website, www.sante.gov.ma, and check out the standing of her human resources department, to which three medical officials we assigned!? Meanwhile, there is not a doctor here within a 100-kilometre radius, just beside where the Minister is located. Her motivation is that she has twins! We have children of two different ages, but that does not count!? Equality!? Commentary and convictions: 1) In order to qualify for having your family united, you have to have twins. It is not enough to be married, have children or be pregnant. Above all else you need twins. So much the worse for those who did not plan on having them! 2) Being united with your family has become a privilege granted to us by another’s benevolence and is not one of our own natural rights. Can you believe that there are unions that supported and continue to support Miss Badou? Are they going to support Miss Badou in this initiative too? 3) Two of her three doctors were appointed from Casablanca and on the path from Morocco to Rabat there are no vacancies. Everybody knows perfectly well that prefectures like Ben M’sik, Sidi Othmane, Hay Mohammed and Sidi Bernoussi, which account for no less than 800 thousand inhabitants, there are certain professions lacking in the public hospitals. 4) Congratulations to the parents of twins! Let us work so that having our families united becomes are right for all!

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