A recent report by Sinar Harian highlighted that only about 10 per cent of available positions for medical graduates in the Ministry of Health Malaysia were filled. The report raised concerns about the low uptake of public sector positions despite ongoing healthcare needs. This development has triggered renewed discussion about employment pathways, workforce distribution and long-term planning in the health sector.
Several years before the pandemic, there was a strong narrative suggesting that Malaysia had an oversupply of doctors and that the profession was no longer critical. Such perceptions inevitably influenced planning decisions. When workforce planning becomes reactive, the system risks moving from one imbalance to another.
Malaysia’s total approved quota for undergraduate medical training is around 4,800 places annually. Approximately 1,600 places are allocated to public universities, with the remainder allocated to private institutions. Public universities consistently utilise their quota, while private institutions do not.
More telling is the decline in provisional registration with the Malaysian Medical Council, which fell from 6,147 in 2017 to 3,142 in 2024, almost a 50 per cent reduction within seven years. This signals a significant contraction in the number of new graduates entering the system.
One likely explanation is reduced enrolment in private medical programmes. Parents may be concerned about the future of the medical profession in Malaysia, particularly uncertainties surrounding contract appointments, permanent posts and long-term career progression. Medical education is costly. If employment prospects appear unstable, confidence declines. For similar reasons, fewer parents may be sending their children overseas to study medicine, given the high financial commitment and uncertain pathway upon return.
There is also a noticeable migration of locally trained graduates to neighbouring countries where career structures may be perceived as more predictable.
Health workforce planning cannot afford to be cyclical or reactive. It must be grounded in long-term projections that consider demographic change, epidemiological transition and the country’s specialist needs. Most importantly, the future of healthcare workers must be secured through stable employment structures, transparent career pathways and sufficient training opportunities. When confidence in the system is restored, enrolment will stabilise, talent will remain, and the nation will avoid repeating cycles of perceived oversupply followed by genuine shortage.