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LCQ5: Hospital Authority frontline doctors

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Following is a question by the Dr Hon Kwok Ka-ki and an oral reply by the Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food, Dr York Chow, in the Legislative Council today (February 15):

Question:

Some frontline doctors of the Hospital Authority (HA) have told me that they have to face situations of heavy work pressure, disparity in pay among doctors performing the same duties and low morale. In this connection, will the Government inform this Council whether it knows:

(a) the respective average weekly working hours and on-call frequencies of doctors in various HA departments and resident doctors in various HA hospitals in each of the past three years; and in the ten HA departments with doctors working the longest hours at present, the changes in their doctors' average weekly working hours and on-call frequencies as compared to those over the past three years, and the reasons for such changes;

(b) the respective numbers of doctors who left and newly joined HA in the past three years, with a breakdown by hospital and rank; and among such new recruits, the respective numbers of those who have been deployed to alleviate the workload of other doctors, to replace doctors who had left, and to provide new or additional services; and

(c) the specific proposals and plans HA has regarding the provision of reasonable remuneration, parity, and improvement in the work environment, in order to attract, motivate and retain frontline doctors?

Reply:

Madam President,

(a) The Government and Hospital Authority (HA) have been paying close attention to the workload and working hours of doctors in public hospitals. In the past few years, the HA has been working towards improving the working conditions of doctors through the deployment of additional staff and rationalization of work arrangements. The HA conducted two internal surveys on the working conditions of frontline doctors in 2000 and 2005 respectively. Generally speaking, the working hours and frequency of on-call duties of frontline doctors vary from one specialty to another due to differences in the nature of their work and variations in the demand for different specialist services. The surveys revealed that the average weekly working hours of frontline doctors (i.e. the sum of normal daytime working hours and resident on-call hours at nights and during weekends) improved considerably in the past five years. A breakdown of the survey findings by major specialties showed that only the working hours of doctors in Pathology increased slightly over the 5-year period. The working hours of all other specialties decreased by 2.2% to 23.2%.

The two surveys also revealed that there were overall improvements in the frequency of on-call duties by frontline doctors. Owing to operational needs for attending to patients with emergency and acute medical needs, hospitals will usually draw up a roster for doctors to take turn in serving on-call duties at night. Most of the specialties have doctors serving on-call duties within hospital premises, but there are also arrangements where the on-call doctors do not remain in the hospital and only return upon request when an emergency arises. The workload of on-call doctors is not fixed and is unpredictable. When an on-call doctor is free, he can rest in the hospital. All public hospitals have rest facilities for use by on-call doctors. According the surveys, doctors in the majority of specialties were arranged to serve on-call duties once every 4 to 5 days in 2000. In 2005, the frequency of on-call duties in the majority of specialties has reduced to once every 4 to 7 or 8 days.

The survey findings on the weekly working hours and on-call frequencies of the frontline doctors broken down by major specialties are set out in Annex A.

(b) In the past three years (i.e. from 2003-04 to 2005-06 (up to December 2005)), the numbers of new resident doctors recruited by HA each year were 312, 297 and 297 respectively. The numbers of doctors who departed HA for various reasons within the same time periods were 252, 298 and 240 respectively. Most of the new recruits had been deployed to replace departed staff. The rest were mainly for strengthening services relating to infectious disease and development of family medicine.

Generally speaking, the HA would fill vacancies at the levels of Consultants, Senior Medical Officers and Associate Consultants through internal promotions.

The numbers of promoted staff, new recruits and staff departures at HA in the past three years broken down by ranks and hospital clusters are set out in Annex B.

(c) The HA has already formulated some concrete plans to further improve the working conditions of frontline doctors in public hospitals and to address the issue of pay disparity amongst contract frontline doctors.

In response to the situation where some doctors work over 70 hours a week, HA is planning to implement a number of initiatives to reduce the working hours of doctors within three years with the target of keeping the work hours under 65 hours per week.

As for the issue of pay disparity amongst frontline doctors, the HA is planning to improve the remuneration packages of contract frontline doctors in April 2006, with a view to narrowing the disparity in pay amongst frontline doctors over the next few years and to providing contract doctors with greater job security. The aim of implementing these measures is to reward and retain quality doctors with good performance. The main features of the improvement measures include -

* Awarding doctors with good performance an annual salary point increment from the beginning of their fourth year of service;

* Awarding one salary point increment to doctors who have successfully passed the intermediate examination for their specialist qualification and two salary points increment for the exit examination;

* Retaining contract resident doctors with good performance for a total of 9 years, so that they can pursue their specialist training with peace of mind and to give them the opportunity to gain more experience in public hospitals after attaining their specialist qualification; and

* Offering longer-term employment to doctors who have successfully secured the Resident Specialist posts, subject to service needs and the financial constraints of the HA.

It is the HA's hope that through the above measures it could become more effective in providing frontline doctors with the appropriate incentive and motivation for good performance and in retaining high caliber doctors within the public medical sector.



Ends/Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Issued at HKT 14:31

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12 Apr 2019