Dr. Suphatthr Reveals Healthcare Pay Disparity: Professional Nurses Earn 18,000 Baht While Volunteer Nurses With Minimal Training Get 15,000
A former hospital director highlights Thailand's pay disparity where newly graduated professional nurses earn just 3,000 baht more than untrained volunteer nurses, questioning the government's plan to hire 10,000 volunteers at 15,000 baht m
Dr. Suphatthr Hasuwan, former director of Sabai Yoi Hospital in Songkhla Province, posted on Facebook on May 18 addressing concerns raised by professional nurses regarding compensation disparities in Thailand's public health system.
Dr. Hasuwan outlined the current situation: The kingdom has approximately 1 million community health volunteers (อสม.) earning 3,000 baht per month, with over 100,000 elevated to specialist status. There are also tens of thousands of certified care givers who complete a 70-hour training course and earn 5,000 baht per month for home-based elderly care.
The health system additionally employs 15,000 to 20,000 professional nurses in subdistrict health centers and municipal health clinics who provide home health care services using their nursing expertise. Now the government plans to add 10,000 volunteer nurses at 15,000 baht monthly—costing 180 million baht annually—though it remains unclear what duties they would perform or whether the arrangement represents value for money.
Dr. Hasuwan pointed out the contradiction: "A newly graduated professional nurse earns 18,000 baht, yet a volunteer nurse with only brief training receives 15,000 baht monthly. It's unclear what tasks they can realistically perform." He called on the health profession to collectively voice concerns so the policy either proceeds appropriately or is abandoned by the Ministry of Public Health.