The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, has rejected the bill seeking to mandate medical and dental practitioners to practice for five years in Nigeria before being granted a full licence and relocating abroad.
Recall the bill sponsored by an All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmaker from Lagos, Ganiyu Johnson, has passed second reading at the House of Representatives.
The lawmaker stated that the bill is seeking to amend the Medical and Dental Practitioners Act 2004, to address the brain drain in the health sector.
On Monday, the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) announced that it will commence a five-day warning strike on Wednesday, over the failure of the federal government to meet its demands.
In a statement released, the association also called for the withdrawal of the anti-brain drain bill from the national assembly as one of their prominent demands.
Speaking to journalists after a Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting on Monday, Ngige said he is not in support of the anti-brain drain bill, stating that the proposed law is unworkable.
The minister asserted that no lawmaker or anyone can restrain medical doctors and dentists from getting their practising licence after completing the necessary process recognised by the Nigerian Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN).
Ngige, therefore, advised the legislature to look for โother waysโ to curb the brain drain, saying that the bill cannot stop anybody from getting a full licence.
He said: โNobody can say they (doctors) will not get a practising licence till after five years. It will run counter to the laws of the land that have established the progression in the practice of medicine.
โI am a medical doctor. When you graduate from medical school, you go on a one-year apprenticeship called housemanship or internship as the case maybe. After your internship, you are now given a full licence because prior to that, what you have is a provisional licence of registration with the Nigerian Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN).
โSo, after that intensive training, you were signed off by consultants and you became a fully qualified medical doctor to attend to human beings and to work without any supervision again. Supervision then is voluntary.
โResident Doctors are those who have that full licence and they want to acquire post-graduate speciality and speciality is known like surgeons, gynaecologists, obstetrics, paediatrics and internal medicine or family medicine. So, they are doctors in training.
โThe bill in the National Assembly cannot stop anybody from getting a full licence. That bill is a private membersโ bill.
โIn the National Assembly, they attend to private membersโ bills and executive bills. Executive bills emanate from the government into the National Assembly with the stamp of the executive.
โIt is either sent by the attorney general of the federation or by the president but usually from the attorney general of the federation. So, itโs not an executive bill, itโs a private members bill.
โThat bill is moved by the man from Lagos. So, members of his constituency can tell him this is worrying us. Canโt we check these doctors this way by you going to speak than put up a document?
โThat document is as far as I am concerned, not workable. Ab initio, I donโt support it and I will never support it. Like I said before, it is like killing a fly with a sledgehammer.
โThey should think of other ways if they are trying to check brain drain, there should be other ways.
โIf a doctor has read on scholarship, you bond him, if a doctor has read on bursary, you can bond him. If a doctor is trained like we are doing now on little or nothing, which is like a scholarship again because N50,000 a session per medical student is nothing when their counterparts overseas pay seventy thousand pounds for a session.
โSo, I donโt support that bill, but you can bond them if you want.โ