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MEDICINE

Universities dismiss ‘lottery’ for Paris medical students

University authorities have denied that medical students in Paris will be selected via a lottery system, after claims that an overfull system will see caps on student places.

Universities dismiss 'lottery' for Paris medical students
Photo: AFP

If your grades are good enough to get into med school in Paris, you won't have to rely on the luck of a lottery to get a place.

These were the words of the Rectorat de Paris, which controls university admissions, after claims that too many students this year would mean a capped intake of students in 2017.

These claims came via Sadep, the French organization that assigns medical students to their schools, and were published in Le Monde newspaper. 

The organization pointed out that there were only 7,500 places for med students in Paris, but this year alone had already seen 8,143 get places – and that an even bigger number was expected for next year. 

The Rectorat, however, said on Thursday that “all first year students in the Paris region will be able to pursue their choice of subject and establishment”.

They also firmly stated that there would be “no lottery system”.

Sadep's claims proved explosive in France on Thursday, prompting Secretary of State for Higher Education and Research Thierry Mandon to tell Liberation: “I will do all that I can so that this kind of 'sorting' in order to enter the first year of medicine will never exist”. 

The FIFDL union told Le Monde that such a system was “playing with the lives of graduates”.

French doctor and writer Christian Lehmann told French radio station France Info that it demonstrated “truly a complete lack of respect” towards the medical students.

He criticized the system further, suggesting that a closer look needed to be taken at how public money was being used, if top universities were no longer able to meet basic demands for arguably one of the most important professions.

(Some internet users have taken to Twitter to make light of the situation, with a picture of a lottery ticket and caption “Student registering for medical school”)

The story launched debates into the selection process overall, which has often received criticism for being elitist in France.

Doctor and writer Martin Winkler told Le Figaro newspaper: “Many young people want to become doctors, but the system is parallel to paying for private schools and it favours children from privileged families”.

 

 

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DOCTORS

Germany’s GPs begin vaccinating patients against Covid-19

For the first time in Germany's vaccination programme, family doctors are allowed to administer jabs.

Germany's GPs begin vaccinating patients against Covid-19
A doctor in Pforzheim, Baden-Württemberg, talking to a patient about the Covid-19 vaccine on March 30th. Photo: DPA

After the painfully slow start to the inoculation campaign in Germany, a new stage is beginning this week: 35,000 GPs nationwide are planning to give residents vaccinations against coronavirus.

Some practices were due to start on Tuesday April 6th, while others are still waiting for vaccine doses and want to follow in the next few days.

Since the start of the rollout at the end of December, injections have so far been administered mainly in the 430 vaccination centres nationwide.

READ ALSO: Germany to make vaccines available at GP practices: What you need to know

Initially, only a small supply of doses is available to family doctors. In the first week, all practices together will receive 940,000 vaccine doses a week.

In purely mathematical terms, that is about 26 doses per practice per week. In the week of April 26th, however, there will be a significant boost to resources – and at that point GPs can expect a total of more than three million doses each week.

READ ALSO: GPs in Germany call for vaccines to be given according to health not age

How will vaccinating work at GPs?

GP practices have to follow the fixed priority order of who can be vaccinated first in Germany.

READ ALSO: When will I be in line for a Covid-19 vaccination?

There is no central invitation programme for vaccinating patients, according to the federal Health Ministry. The practices can regulate how they allocate vaccination appointments themselves – for example by phone or with online bookings.

Some family doctors have been vaccinating for some time as part of pilot projects – and in Bavaria jabs by GPs started last week in 1,635 practices.

Calls to speed up vaccine campaign

This weeks marks the second quarter the vaccination campaign when more Covid vaccines are expected after scarce supplies in the first quarter of the year.

The Association of Private Health Insurers (Verband der Privaten Krankenversicherung, PKV) is calling on the federal government to quickly push ahead with vaccines.

“The start of the vaccination campaign, also through GP practices, is the right step, but it is not enough to get the coronavirus vaccine to as many people as possible as quickly as at all possible,” association director Florian Reuther told DPA.

“Already at this stage politicians must prepare the next step and make vaccination possible in companies and with all other groups of doctors and dentists as soon as vaccine supplies increase as expected in the next few weeks.”

Health Minister Jens Spahn (CDU) had said at the end of March that company doctors should only join the vaccination campaign after GPs.

READ ALSO: Germany’s Health Minister promises more freedom to those fully vaccinated

“There is still too little,” Spahn said of the available doses. He said he found it difficult to vaccinate younger employees of companies as long as the older ones were not yet protected.

But Reuther said the infrastructure of company doctors was particularly suitable. “We already have numerous requests from health insurance companies whose company doctors are immediately available to vaccinate their work forces – but unfortunately are not allowed to order vaccine at the moment,” he said.

Many companies had also offered to vaccinate employees’ family members as well. In Reuther’s view, this would also make sense. He called on the federal government to solve the necessary organisational issues now – “and not only when the vaccines are piling up in the yard”.

READ ALSO: Vaccination centres in some German states ‘to close over Easter

Vocabulary

GPs/general practitioners – (die) Hausärzte (or der Hausarzt as singular)

Surgeries/practices- (die) Praxen (or die Praxis as singular)

Vaccination centres – (die) Impfzentren

Vaccination appointment (der) Impftermin

Company doctor/in-house doctor – (der) Betriebsarzt

We’re aiming to help our readers improve their German by translating vocabulary from some of our news stories. Did you find this article useful? Let us know.

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