Bujumbura : Burundi government introduces a stabilization allowance for its doctors
The Burundian government, through the ministries in charge of Health and Finance, has taken a significant step to retain its health professionals. A joint order, signed on January 16, 2025, introduces a stabilization allowance for consulting physicians and hospital directors. This allowance takes effect from July 1, 2025 for practitioners already in post.
INFO SOS Médias Burundi
This initiative concerns three categories of doctors : general practitioners and dental surgeons who will now receive a monthly bonus of 1,000,000 Burundi francs, specialist doctors whose allowance will amount to 2,000,000 Burundi francs per month. Finally, there are resident doctors who will also benefit from this measure, although the exact amount of their allowance has not been specified.
In addition, a remoteness allowance is provided for doctors practicing far from Bujumbura, the commercial city where all United Nations agencies and the central administration are concentrated. It varies between 100,000 and 1,000,000 Burundi francs, depending on the distance, ranging from 50 km to more than 200 km from the commercial capital.
Objective : to slow down the exodus of doctors
This measure aims to address a persistent problem : the departure of medical talent to other horizons offering better conditions. Burundian doctors, often faced with insufficient remuneration, frequently choose to practice elsewhere, where their expertise is more recognized and better remunerated. By introducing this stabilization allowance, the government hopes to retain these professionals who are essential to the proper functioning of the national health system.
Positive reactions from the population and health professionals
The population welcomes this initiative, hoping for an improvement in the availability and quality of care. Some users of health services express their satisfaction, anticipating a reinforced medical presence in public structures.
For their part, doctors see this measure as recognition of their work and an improvement in their living conditions, which could strengthen their commitment to the Burundian health system.
In short, this stabilization allowance appears to be an appropriate response to the challenges facing the medical sector in the small East African nation, with the hope of better retention of talent and an overall improvement in health services.
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A health worker collecting blood for health structures in Burundi during a blood donation campaign (SOS Médias Burundi)
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