South Africa’s youngest woman doctor among those unemployed, pleads for help

Dr Thakgalo Thibela was upgraded from several grades because of her academic brilliance, and she finished her matric with seven distinctions at the age of 15. File Picture: Independent Newspapers

Dr Thakgalo Thibela was upgraded from several grades because of her academic brilliance, and she finished her matric with seven distinctions at the age of 15. File Picture: Independent Newspapers

Published Feb 20, 2024

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The scourge of unemployment leaves no field untouched, even medicine.

Even South Africa’s youngest woman medical doctor has found herself without a job and is asking for help.

Dr Thakgalo Thibela, 24, said she is eager and ready for service anywhere in the country.

“I happen to find myself as part of the over 800 unemployed doctors in South Africa currently,” said Thibela.

“I am willing and ready to serve anywhere in the country but that opportunity is not being afforded to me. I became a doctor because I wanted to help people, and not being able to do just that has been mentally taxing. Please help.”

The young woman is a maverick, she became the nation’s youngest woman medical doctor at the age of 21 after graduating from Wits University with a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery.

She attended Farel Primary School in Bushbuckridge, Mpumalanga, where she was smart enough to skip Grade 7, and then went on to Lehlasedi High School, where she also skipped Grade 9.

Thibela was upgraded from these grades because of her academic brilliance, and she finished her matric with seven distinctions at the age of 15.

She finished her internship at Helen Joseph Hospital and her community service at Mapulaneng Hospital and plans to become a neurosurgeon in the future.

Dr Siyaneliswa Shozi, who is the spokesperson for unemployed doctors, was at the forefront of the health workers’ march to the Department of Health.

Speaking to IOL, Shozi said the march was intended to highlight discontent with the scarcity of doctor positions and to criticise the health department’s supposed lack of funds.

“We are calling for the employment of all doctors and allied healthcare workers who are available to help our Public Health Sector,” Shozi said.

“The government must rework their budget to accommodate all Post Comm Serve (post-community service) doctors who are willing to work in government, and the Minister of Health must work on making sure that all resources needed to work are made available.”

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