KP’s oldest and largest public sector hospital, LRH, where, according to senior faculty members, they were following the new attendance system and had even brought good results but some office-bearers of the Postgraduate Medical Institute Teaching Staff Association (PGMITSA) asked them not to follow it.
“Majority of the people are following the new system, which obviously is very good, but our fellow colleagues don’t like it. They asked us not to follow it or else we would be responsible for our losses,” a senior faculty member at LRH told The News.
Pleading anonymity, he said they brought the issue in the knowledge of the hospital administration but it failed to take its note.“Look at the language they used to prevent the doctors from following the biometric system. It doesn’t suit us,” he felt.
According to this senior faculty member, there were some minor issues associated with the new system but it could have been resolved through consultation with the Health Department.He said after the PGMI Teaching Staff Association (PGMITSA) opposed the
attendance system and asked others to boycott it, all the junior doctors as well as other staff members no longer follow it.
Dr Musa Kaleem, general secretary PGMITSA, however, argued that they opposed the biometric system as it was installed for fixed workers.“Biometric system is installed for shift system. We are willing to follow the biometric system if the government wanted us to work for six hours only. You may know we are 24 hours on call and can be called any time to the hospital,” he argued.
He said when the chief secretary, health secretary and other bureaucrats don’t follow the same system, why the government wanted to impose biometric system on doctors only.After LRH, the doctors of Khyber Teaching Hospital (KTH) and Hayatabad Medical Complex (HMC) also started opposing the biometric system.
“In the beginning most of the doctors were following the new attendance system and it had improved healthcare services at the hospital but later the doctors gradually started losing interest. And now only 20 per cent of the doctors would be following the system,” a senior faculty member at KTH told The News and wished not to be named.
However, general secretary Khyber Medical College Teaching Staff Association Dr Amer Azhar, an associate professor at the nephrology department of KTH, also said that the biometric system was meant for those working for fixed hours.
“We are 24 hours on call and cannot even go out of the city. In UK, the doctors, who remain on call for 24 hours, are paid double than those working for six hours,” he argued.He said under the Civil Service Rules, officers of grade-17 and above are exempted from attendance.“I met the secretary health and quoted same rule. He told me it was meant for the secretariat staff only which is not true,” Dr Amer Azhar said.