Measures were unveiled by the German government o try to stop a drain of doctors from country to city amid public concern that an ageing population will require ever more health care.
Measures were unveiled by the German government o try to stop a drain of doctors from country to city amid public concern that an ageing population will require ever more health care. The government of Chancellor Angela Merkel said it would introduce tax breaks to boost the salaries of doctors setting up or taking over practices in rural areas.
The dearth of practitioners is especially large in eastern Germany, in the northern state of Lower Saxony, and in southern Bavaria.
Currently some 138,000 doctors practice in Germany, a ratio of 38 doctors for 100,000 inhabitants compared to 30 doctors for 100,000 inhabitants in 1990.
Officials estimate that with at least 1,000 jobs currently finding no takers and tens of thousands of doctors headed for retirement over the coming years, the problem will only get worse.
Already 50 percent of patients living in the countryside must go to town for medical treatment, Andreas Koehler, the chairman of the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians, told ARD television.
"The main problem ... is that most practitioners no longer want to be on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week" as is often the case in rural areas, Stefan Gress, professor for health economics at Fulda technical school, told ARD.
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Source-AFP