Didn’t I say this almost 2 years ago? https://pagalavan.com/2010/04/27/no-more-nursing-schools-from-july/. The government stopped new nursing colleges from July 2010 onwards but this was what I said then:
“It is good that the government is going to stop new nursing colleges but will this solve the problem? The existing nursing colleges itself are producing thousands of nurses of doubtful quality and they will keep producing them to get profit. So the number of new nurses will continue to be produced by these colleges, or may even increase! Even now, there are fresh nurses who are unable to find a job as the government service seem to be saturated with them.”
This was 2 years ago and now, the article below written by Dr Jeyakumar clearly illustrates the current situation. I predicted this to happen and it is happening. The number of application for nursing job in my hospital is piling up day by day. Many of them are totally below par in quality and not even employable. I was made to understand that you just need 1 credit in SPM to be eligible to do nursing!! You don’t need to pay anything as the college will apply for PTPTN loan for you. And woolah, you will do the course for free and become unemployed later. Who cares about job prospects as the college has already made the money.
The same situation is also happening for radiographers, physiotherapist and pharmacy dispensers. All these private colleges are recruiting students into this courses by giving false information that there is severe shortage. Obviously the Ministry of Higher Education is sleeping or not bothered at all as we are “education hub” , mah…………
What’s next? Unemployed doctors……………………… the same scenario is already happening for medicine and thus the “so-called” moratorium of medical schools last year. BUT every medical college ( 36 of them) seem to be increasing the number of intake year by year, even introducing newer twining programmes. Housemanship is now given on contract basis and I can see some shocking news waiting for them when they finish housemanship in 2 years time.
Thousands of private college nursing grads jobless — Jeyakumar Devaraj
January 14, 2012
JAN 14 — The Higher Education Ministry’s failure to control the greed of private nursing colleges has established a situation in which thousands of their graduates are jobless. And yet, these graduates are burdened with PTPTN loans of as much as RM50,000 to RM60,000.
Here are the facts:
● 61 private institutions have been given the go-ahead by the Higher Education Ministry to conduct nursing courses;
● there are currently more than 37,500 nursing undergraduates enrolled in these 61 private learning institutions. A large percentage of these undergraduates have acquired the PTPTN loan, normally around RM55,000;
● the total amount of staff nurses employed throughout the country as of December 2010 was 61,110. Of that total, 47,992 were stationed in the government sector and the remainder 21,118 in the private sector;
● in 2010, 7,665 nursing graduates from private institutions sat for the Nursing Board examination. Only 70.1 per cent of them passed the examination compared to the passing rate of 98.4 per cent amongst graduates from Health Ministry colleges.
● Only 42.7 per cent of nursing graduates from private higher education institutions in 2010 succeeded in acquiring jobs at hospitals and clinics
Taking all these facts into account, we wish to know the following:
● Is it the Higher Education Ministry that determines the intake quotas for nursing courses in private educational institutions in Malaysia? If so, what is the rationale for allowing an intake quota of 9,000 undergraduates for the year 2011?
● Is the minister aware that every trained nurse must renew his or her professional licence (APC — Annual Practising Certificate) every year? One of the terms that is required to acquire the APC is an occupational status as a nurse in a hospital. Therefore, if one is unable to get employed as a nurse, he or she is not eligible to renew his or her APC.
● Is the minister aware that the marketability of a staff nurse will be adversely affected if she is unable to get a nursing post in a hospital? This is due to the fact that a nurse’s skills will deteriorate if the graduate is not given a chance to practise as a nurse.
● Is the minister aware that a lot of the graduates at nursing private higher education institutions originate from families that are not rich? They are hoping to get a job as a nurse in order to pay back their PTPTN loans and to aid their respective families.
● Is the minister aware that repayment of the PTPTN loan is required even if the graduate is unable to acquire a job as a nurse?
● How many of the 61 private higher education institutions currently offering nursing courses have started or are applying to start medicine courses to train doctors?
Our demands:
● Freeze the intake of new students into private nursing colleges. The market is flooded at this point in time. Do not burden more young girls with PTPTN loans that they will not be able to pay back.
● Look into the other courses that are offered by the private colleges such as physiotherapy, health care, laboratory assistants, and radiology. If there exists a similar situation of over-supply for these other courses as well, please freeze the intake of new students into these courses.
● Reject applications of private higher education institutions to conduct medicine courses if the passing rate in the Nursing Board examination was below 90 per cent for graduates from those institutions in 2010 or 2009.
● Take over the PTPTN debts for all nurse graduates who have not acquired a nursing post in hospitals despite passing the Nursing Board’s examination.
● Conduct an investigation to determine why the market for trained nurses is flooded — 37,500 will graduate in three years, whereas the need for nurses is only 1,500 per year (more or less five per cent of the total currently employed in the private sector). Is this because of poor judgment on the part of officials who determine the quota or is corruption involved? The profits of private higher education institutions are immense!
● Review the validity of the policy of relying on private companies to provide higher education for our younger generation. It is evidently clear from the actions of the private nursing colleges that maximising profits is their main focus! The existence of PTPTN loans has underwritten the income of these private higher education institutions, and they are currently competing to attract as many students as possible without a care as to whether they can provide adequate practical exposure to their students or whether there are sufficient job opportunities for their graduates.
We hope that the Higher Education Ministry officials will study the issues that we have brought up and fix a date within a month’s time to inform us of the steps that will be taken by the ministry to manage the identified problems in this memorandum. — aliran.com
* The above article is a memorandum submitted by Dr Jeyakumar Devaraj to the Higher Education Minister on December 13, 2011 expressing concern about the high number of unemployed nursing graduates.
* Dr Jeyakumar Devaraj is the member of Parliament for Sungai Siput.
* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication. The Malaysian Insider does not endorse the view unless specified.
Many of these unscrupulous private colleges should be shut down in the first place ,they are churning out thousands of unskilled nurses every year .We had a fresh graduate who didn’t even know what is a MIMS book !
Let alone any drugs for that matter and he applied for a government hospital as according to him it’s an easier life over there and guess what ? he got it !
I think all patients have to take a gamble with their lives now as this is what the Malaysian education system had produced !
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