Saturday, December 31, 2022

I’m sorry, I’m leaving




I’m sorry, I’m leaving



From Dr Leonard Goh


I’m sorry, I’m leaving . . . although, I had initially envisioned that I would spend my entire professional career as a government doctor in Malaysia.

However, the realities of life have caught up with the idealist in me and I have come to the inescapable conclusion that I have to leave.

Our healthcare system is too broken, especially when it comes to the issue of contract doctors. The more the government tries to fix the problems related to contract doctors, the more complicated the issues get.

This is the inevitable result of making such an important policy change on a whim, without prior stakeholder engagements or any hint of prospective planning. We desperately need a reset button, but will the government have the courage to admit that they were wrong and be willing to start over from scratch?

I still have a long career path ahead of me. I know that given the right opportunities, I have the potential to be a leader in the regional, or even global, stage.

Staying in government service would mean denying myself any hope of reaching for the stars. I’m done with running with all my might but getting nowhere, on the giant hamster wheel that is the health ministry.



The workplace conditions are ridiculously inhumane. My colleagues and I are working past the point of sanity to treat our patients to the best of our abilities, but the government has time and again failed to support us in this endeavour.

We have been shortchanged far too much for far too long. I refuse to allow my altruism and empathy to be exploited anymore.

It’s not my fault that I have been looking for options outside the government service, long before I finished my housemanship training. My hand was forced by the government when they insisted on hiring me on a mere three-year contract, even though my career progression is measured in decades.

Now, top that up with the still-ongoing series of administrative blunders and haphazard planning by the health ministry. Is it not logical, then, for me to bravely pursue the uncertain promise of greener pastures and success overseas, rather than meekly settle for the certain promise of a bleak future in the government service here?

I’m sorry, I am leaving, but it is not without a lack of trying, though. Believe me, I’ve tried. I’ve sacrificed most of my time to advocate for junior doctors and improvements in our healthcare system.

I was the first contract doctor to take up the position of SCHOMOS (Section Concerning House Officers, Medical Officers and Specialists) state representative, and thus far the only one to have held a SCHOMOS exco position at the national level.

I’d like to think that I made a difference, perhaps insufficient and rather insignificant in the grand scheme of things, but a difference, nevertheless. Despite that, it’s all too little, too late.

I’m sorry, I am leaving, but this doesn’t have to be goodbye forever. While many doctors have left, plenty are staying. I wish those remaining the very best in reigniting the engine of progress and getting the country back on track.

Meanwhile, I’ll be forging ahead with my own path in a foreign land. When the time comes, I’ll be waiting at the station ahead, ready to board the train again, armed with my accumulated years of experience abroad.

I’m sorry, I am leaving, and fingers crossed, we’ll cross paths again one day, tanah airku tercinta, tanah tumpahnya darahku.



Dr Leonard Goh served as a contract doctor in a government hospital from 2019 to 2022 and is an FMT reader.


2 comments:

  1. One wonders how an issue has dragged on for years with no solution. Even KJ, a supposedly super Health Minister did not provide any relief. Perhaps, he ran out of time before he could fulfill his goals.

    Be that as it may, this brain drain will continue unabated if the situation persists.

    What past governments of the day lack was political will. Will the current government too lack that political will to resolve the issue once and for all?

    Frankly, I doubt if AI's government has that political will as well.

    ReplyDelete
  2. All the inefficiencies, mismanagements, corruptions & cronyism throughout& through in of the bolihland system r the chronic exhibitions of a single disease symbolized by a f*cked keruanan narrative of under-confidence in facing a real world challenge.

    The only possibility for this long ketuananized administration to adapt any sensible changes IS to go to the root of that ketuanan indoctrination.

    Eliminate that narrative completely - 涅槃重生!

    But, tankuku lah. The ketuanan freaks, zombies & blur-sotongs have NO such ingrained mental concept. They would rather bulldozed this land to the ground than see the real seed of prosperity grows.

    ReplyDelete