South African Medical Journal
Volume 102, Issue 8, 2012, Pages 655-658

Slaves of the state - medical internship and community service in South Africa (Article) (Open Access)

Erasmus N.*
  • a School of Law, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Owing to a chronic shortage of medical staff in South Africa, sleep-deprived medical interns and community service doctors work up to 200 hours of overtime per month under the state's commuted overtime policy. Nurses moonlight in circumvention of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act. For trainee doctors, overtime over 80 hours is unpaid, and rendered involuntarily under threat of not qualifying to practise medicine in South Africa. As forced labour, and sleep deprivation amounting to cruel and degrading treatment, it is outlawed in international law. No other professional group in the country is subjected to such levels of exploitation and discrimination by the state. These abuses should be challenged under the Constitution. Solutions include the installation of electronic time-recording in state hospitals, cessation of unpaid overtime, limits on medical intern shifts to a maximum of 16 hours, and an investigation by the Human Rights Commission of South Africa.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

Internship and Residency sleep deprivation law nurse Community Health Services human Clinical Competence Coercion Work Schedule Tolerance South Africa human rights Humans Education, Medical, Graduate employment discrimination social welfare medical education Article working time medical service physician Quality of Health Care government regulation medical staff employment Torture

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84864404547&doi=10.7196%2fSAMJ.5987&partnerID=40&md5=e1ed9a05f61cddafa6166d6018b3c62e

DOI: 10.7196/SAMJ.5987
ISSN: 02569574
Cited by: 23
Original Language: English