Dear Friends:

The following items of news from the New York Times this morning (12  03 202) 
are my selections:


1. America Is Stealing the World's Doctors (Copied below)


2. Newswallah: Long Reads Edition 


IHT Rendezvous


Man Asia Literary Prize to Be Awarded This Week


-bhuban










America Is Stealing the World’s Doctors
By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Kunj Desai, a Zambian-born doctor of Indian descent, now practices in Newark, 
New Jersey, where salaries are nearly ten times that at home, and he is 
surrounded by modern facilities.
“In a globalized economy, the countries that pay the most and offer the 
greatest chance for advancement tend to get the top talent,” Matt McAllester 
writes in The New York Times Sunday Magazine.
South America’s soccer players migrate to Europe, high-tech workers from India 
and China go the United States, he writes, and “the United States, with its 
high salaries and technological innovation, is also the world’s most powerful 
magnet for doctors, attracting more every year than Britain, Canada and 
Australia — the next most popular destinations for migrating doctors — 
combined.”

The Council on Physician and Nurse Supply estimates that in 10 years, the 
United States could have a shortage of 200,000 doctors. Already, one in four 
doctors working in this country is trained in a medical school overseas (though 
this includes some American doctors who attended medical school outside the 
United States). American medical schools are producing more graduates, but many 
of them will become specialists who can command better pay. The demand for 
primary-care doctors is expected to stay high, perpetuating the demand for 
foreign medical graduates.
Even in the unlikely event that American medical schools produce more general 
practitioners, nothing but legislation would prevent American hospitals from 
cherry-picking the most promising young doctors the world has to offer, 
according to Laurie Garrett, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign 
Relations. “If you can take from an applicant pool from the whole planet, why 
would you only take from Americans?” Garrett said. “For the foreseeable future, 
every health provider, from Harvard University’s facilities all the way down to 
a rural clinic in the Ethiopian desert, is competing for medical talent, and 
the winners are those with money.











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