SINGAPORE – With the local medical school intake increasing by more than a quarter over the past decade, the proportion of foreign-trained doctors in Singapore’s medical workforce has consequently declined and stabilised at about 40 per cent, with more than half comprising Singaporeans returning home to work here.
The Ministry of Health (MOH) and Singapore Medical Council (SMC) jointly announced on Jan 27 that
another eight overseas institutions would be added to the list of recognised universities for medicine in Singapore
, bringing the total from 112 to 120. The move “will allow Singapore to better meet the growing demand for doctors as our population ages”.
This is also the second consecutive year that more medical schools are being recognised by Singapore, a move that runs counter to the massive cut in January 2020.
In 2019, MOH accepted SMC’s recommendation to trim more than 35 per cent of recognised medical schools, shrinking the pool from 160 to 103 schools.
The changes included halving the recognised schools in Canada from 14 to seven, and China from eight to four, as well as dropping those in the US from 38 to 30, Japan from eight to three, and India from nine to two.
Five countries had their recognised medical schools totally delisted – Israel, Italy, Norway, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
Explaining the rationale then, MOH said the total annual intake at local medical schools had risen to about 500 in 2018, and the impact would be fully realised from 2023 when these students graduate, and hence, “we expect our need to recruit overseas-trained doctors to moderate and stabilise in the coming years”.
But demand has not abated for doctors, even as their numbers continue to grow.
In response to queries by The Straits Times about its move to expand the list of recognised institutions, MOH said it expects the trend of increasing numbers of doctors to continue as society ages and demand for healthcare rises.
For Singapore to meet its healthcare needs, “we will need to augment our core of local doctors, with a minority of foreign doctors trained overseas”, added MOH.





