Migration of Health Workers from Commonwealth Countries: Experiences and Recommendations for Action
Synopsis
In recent years there have been renewed concerns worldwide about the tremendous drain of resources that can occur when skilled health professionals migrate, particularly from developing to developed countries. Although such movement often has many advantages for the individuals concerned and their families, from the point of view of donor countries, it can have far-reaching consequences both for their economies and the development of their health services.
In the Commonwealth, migration of health professionals is a major problem for some member countries, particularly small states. In 1999, the Commonwealth Secretariat commissioned consultants to carry out literature reviews and to collect data from Ministries of Health in each of the four Commonwealth regions (Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and the Pacific), as a basis for recommending policies and strategic approaches to Commonwealth governments. This publication is based on a synthesis of the reports of these consultants.
Chapters
-
Preface
-
Executive summary
-
Introduction
-
The nature and extent of movement of trained health professionals
-
Issues and problems relevant to recruitment, deployment, utilisation and retention
-
Factors that contribute to migration
-
Strategic approaches that have been used by countries to reduce outward migration and to mitigate its effects
-
Conclusions and recommendations
-
References and notes and Annexes
Downloads
Published
Categories
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.