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Wednesday, 22 January, 2025

Study Finds 57% of Public Health Graduates in Bangladesh Struggle to Secure Employment

Express Report
  21 Jan 2025, 04:09
Intern doctors demonstrated demanding pay hike recently in the city

Around 57 per cent of graduates in the Public Health discipline face significant challenges in finding jobs in relevant fields, according to a new study by Bangladesh Health Watch (BHW).

Their barriers to employment include limited job and research opportunities in the public health sector, lack of curricula designed to develop job-ready skills, and a shortage of qualified educators, according to the report, titled “State of Professional Public Health Education in Bangladesh (2023-2024),” launched at an event held at BRAC Tower in Dhaka’s Mohakhali Friday.

It was the ninth report published by BHW, a civil society platform that has been publishing reports on various health issues since 2006.

Highlighting key findings of the study, Mahruba Khanam, coordinator (research) of BHW, said non-medical graduates face more challenges than their medical counterparts and public university graduates encounter more difficulties compared to those from private institutions.

The study, conducted in November 2023, involving 300 undergraduates of different institutions, revealed that graduates from public institutions such as Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University and Jahangirnagar University face the highest challenges, while those from North South University face the least.

Respondents from BSMMU reported the most employment challenges (82pc), followed by JU (over 64pc), Daffodil International University (over 59pc), National Institute of Preventive and Social Medicine (NIPSOM) (over 58pc), BRAC University (James P Grant School of Public Health) (over 55pc), North South University (over 40pc), and other institutions (over 69pc).

The survey, however, did not include an equal number of participants from all institutions.

Addressing the event, Professor Mohammad Zahirul Islam of NSU emphasised that public health graduates from private institutions face fewer challenges due to better communication skills and curriculum diversity.

Dr Ataur Rahman, director of the Center for Professional Skill Development and a contributor to the report, said hiring external faculty and high dropout rates among public health students contribute to these challenges.

Professor Rounaq Jahan, convener of the BHW Advisory Council and distinguished fellow at the Center for Policy Dialogue (CPD), suggested prioritising reforms in public health education, and advocated for collaboration between public and private institutions, maintaining curriculum standards, and integrating public health into governance frameworks.

Speaking as chief guest, Md Sarwar Bari, secretary to the Medical Education and Family Welfare Division, acknowledged significant progress achieved in public health education recently, and stressed that it should not remain theoretical, and its benefits must be extended to the community level.

Ahmad Mushtaque Raza Chowdhury, convenor of BHW, chaired the event.

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Study Finds 57% of Public Health Graduates in Bangladesh Struggle to Secure Employment

Express Report
  21 Jan 2025, 04:09
Intern doctors demonstrated demanding pay hike recently in the city

Around 57 per cent of graduates in the Public Health discipline face significant challenges in finding jobs in relevant fields, according to a new study by Bangladesh Health Watch (BHW).

Their barriers to employment include limited job and research opportunities in the public health sector, lack of curricula designed to develop job-ready skills, and a shortage of qualified educators, according to the report, titled “State of Professional Public Health Education in Bangladesh (2023-2024),” launched at an event held at BRAC Tower in Dhaka’s Mohakhali Friday.

It was the ninth report published by BHW, a civil society platform that has been publishing reports on various health issues since 2006.

Highlighting key findings of the study, Mahruba Khanam, coordinator (research) of BHW, said non-medical graduates face more challenges than their medical counterparts and public university graduates encounter more difficulties compared to those from private institutions.

The study, conducted in November 2023, involving 300 undergraduates of different institutions, revealed that graduates from public institutions such as Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University and Jahangirnagar University face the highest challenges, while those from North South University face the least.

Respondents from BSMMU reported the most employment challenges (82pc), followed by JU (over 64pc), Daffodil International University (over 59pc), National Institute of Preventive and Social Medicine (NIPSOM) (over 58pc), BRAC University (James P Grant School of Public Health) (over 55pc), North South University (over 40pc), and other institutions (over 69pc).

The survey, however, did not include an equal number of participants from all institutions.

Addressing the event, Professor Mohammad Zahirul Islam of NSU emphasised that public health graduates from private institutions face fewer challenges due to better communication skills and curriculum diversity.

Dr Ataur Rahman, director of the Center for Professional Skill Development and a contributor to the report, said hiring external faculty and high dropout rates among public health students contribute to these challenges.

Professor Rounaq Jahan, convener of the BHW Advisory Council and distinguished fellow at the Center for Policy Dialogue (CPD), suggested prioritising reforms in public health education, and advocated for collaboration between public and private institutions, maintaining curriculum standards, and integrating public health into governance frameworks.

Speaking as chief guest, Md Sarwar Bari, secretary to the Medical Education and Family Welfare Division, acknowledged significant progress achieved in public health education recently, and stressed that it should not remain theoretical, and its benefits must be extended to the community level.

Ahmad Mushtaque Raza Chowdhury, convenor of BHW, chaired the event.

Comments

Children Among 'Enforced Disappearance Victims' Alongside Women, Commission Report Reveals
No Need to Panic Over HMPV, but Stay Alert, Advises BSMMU VC
Cancer Deaths Decline, But Diagnoses Surge, Especially Among Younger Women
Treatment Costs Exceed Tobacco Revenue Collection: Farida
ACC to Probe Hasina’s Alleged Power Misuse in Putul’s WHO Appointment