BERLIN — Thousands of Syrian doctors work in Germany, and the fall of Bashar Assad is raising concern over the potential consequences for the health sector if many of them were to return home.
Germany became a leading destination for Syrian refugees over the past decade, and some politicians were quick to start talking about encouraging the return of at least some after rebels took Damascus earlier this month. Others noted that the exiles include many well-qualified people and said their departure would hurt Germany — particularly that of doctors and other medical staff.
''Whole areas in the health sector would fall away if all the Syrians who work here now were to leave our country,'' Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said last week. ''For us it is important that we make the offer to the Syrians who are here, who have a job, who have integrated, who are crime-free, whose children go to school, to stay here and be there for our economy.''
Syrians have become a factor in a health sector that struggles to fill jobs, part of a wider problem Germany has with an aging population and a shortage of skilled labor.
The head of the German Hospital Federation, Gerald Gass, says Syrians now make up the largest single group of foreign doctors, accounting for 2% to 3%.
An estimated 5,000 Syrian doctors work in hospitals alone. Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, who puts the total number of Syrian doctors at over 6,000, says they are ''indispensable'' to health care.
Gass said the picture hospital operators are getting from Syrian doctors so far is ''very varied.'' Some — particularly those with many relatives still in Syria — are considering a quick return if the situation proves stable, while others feel at ease and well-integrated in Germany and want to stay. But ''no looming mass movement toward Syria is recognizable'' at present.
''It's certainly not the case that patient care would collapse in Germany if all Syrian doctors returned now,'' Gass said. ''But of course we have the situation that these people often work in smaller groups at individual sites" — whose quick departure could force temporary local closures.