Managing medical migration from poor countries
1 Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana, PO Box LG13, Legon, Accra, Ghana
Migration of health workers from poorer to richer nations is unlikely to stop, but we can and must put policies in place to minimise the damage it causes
Introduction
In the past, the migration of skilled health professionals from poorer to richer countries was essentially a passive process. Movement was driven mainly by the political, economic, social, and professional circumstances of the individual migrant. In recent years, however, demand for health workers in many countries in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development has been greatly increased by changes in population dynamics. In response, some of these countries are relying increasingly on imported labour, with potentially damaging consequences for the healthcare systems in many developing countries, especially Africa. Indiscriminate poaching of health professionals is also likely to damage receiving countries in the long term. In this article I explore the policy options likely to minimise the consequences of migration of health workers.
, 百拇医药
Why do health workers emigrate
Studies focusing on why skilled health professionals emigrate have identified two broad categories: the "push" and the "pull" factors.1 2 Among the push factors are low wages, poor motivation, persistent shortages of basic medical supplies, dangerous working conditions, outdated equipment, lack of supervision, and limited career opportunities.2 3 Involuntary factors such as human rights violations, ethnic and religious tensions, political persecution, wars, and economic collapse also play a part.4 Economic reasons, access to professional development opportunities, and job security are among the most important pull factors.
, 百拇医药
Empirical evidence on the size of the problem is only now emerging.5 6 For instance, in Ghana over 60% of all doctors trained locally in the 1980s had emigrated by 1999.7 In 2001 alone, it lost over 2972 nurses compared with 387 nurses in 1999.8 The vacancy rate for nurses in 2002 was 57% compared with 25% in 1998. Similar losses are reported in other parts of the developing world.6 7 9
Too few doctors who come to the West ever return home
, 百拇医药
Credit: IAN HOOTON/SPL
Winners and losers
The mass emigration of skilled health professionals is not a neutral event. At present the costs and benefits are unevenly distributed.4 10 The host countries benefit from short term relief of labour shortages, increase in available human capital, stimulation of capacity for innovation, savings in educational costs, and increased global competitiveness.11 The potential benefits to the origin countries include financial gains through remittances, skills transfer, and possible investment if workers return.12 However, all these are trivial compared with the losses, which include loss of public educational investment, loss of intellectual capital, reduced range of available services, chronic understaffing of health facilities, and poor healthcare services.3 13 In extreme cases, a widening of the population health gap may result in reduced productivity, loss of national economic investment, and potential damage to economic development.1 2 13
, http://www.100md.com
Affected developing countries face difficult choices. They can neither control the outflow of skill nor ignore its consequences on the larger community.14 The right of the individual health worker to emigrate has to be balanced against the consequences of such migration on the welfare of the larger society. This problem has rekindled an old debate between those who view skilled migration as the rational expression of the right of individuals to maximise their utility and those who view it as concealed exploitation of poorer countries by the richer countries.15 16
, 百拇医药
What went wrong
Changing population dynamics within industrialised countries have created an ageing population with increased demand on health services.17 The problems arising from factors such as low fertility, increased longevity, a trend towards early retirement, and an ageing workforce are likely to deepen over the next half century.18 19 This difficulty is compounded by a persistent shortage of health professionals, especially nurses. The US, for example, expects a nursing shortfall of around 500 000 by 2015.20 In addition, globalisation and the rapid commercialisation of health services has increased competition for skilled labour.13
, 百拇医药
In response, some governments (developed and developing) have entered into bilateral agreements for the supply of healthcare professionals from specific countries for specified durations.10 Others, like Canada, Australia, and the UK have opted for a two pronged approach. A short term plan of "ethical" international recruitment and a long range plan to train more new doctors and nurses.21 22 23 More generally, however, many countries have instituted emigration policies that favour direct recruitment of foreign health professionals—for example, the US H-1C visa programme targeting nurses, Australia's migration occupations in demand list, the UK's shortage occupations list, and Germany's green card system.3 24 In effect, many countries are using selective immigration as an instrument of industrial policy.10 In the words of the German interior minister Otto Schily: "There's competition among the industrialised countries for the best minds. That's why we have to direct our immigration law more strongly towards our own economic interests."25
, http://www.100md.com
Challenge of ethical recruitment
It is tempting, therefore, for destination countries to ignore the consequences of indiscriminate poaching on the health of the origin countries. This strategy, however, is unlikely to serve the long term interests of either the origin or the receiving countries. The consequences of further deterioration of the already frail health systems in affected countries may go beyond health to other sectors of the economy.15 16 25 The potential for economic decline, political instability, and mass emigration is real. More drastic measures than those used recently by Italy and Australia may be necessary to halt migration into developed countries.
, http://www.100md.com
Fortunately, concern about the harmful effects of indiscriminate poaching is growing.26 The adoption of a code of ethical recruitment by the UK Department of Health and Commonwealth countries are notable (albeit feeble) attempts at minimising the damage.27 28 So far, however, the effect of the existing codes on recruitment has not been systematically examined.29
Strategies and solutions
Clearly, the shortage of health professionals has no simple solution. The problem is global and therefore requires a global solution. The goal is to meet the legitimate labour needs of the developed countries without damaging the health systems of the developing countries. However, effective international cooperation on the management of skills migration cannot be achieved without comprehensive and accurate data on stocks and flows of health workers. This is difficult to obtain because countries are not specifically required to track healthcare staff. A recent review by WHO noted that existing data on the migration of health workers are neither complete nor fully comparable, are often underused, and are not as timely as required.30 Furthermore, the lack of standardised definitions and data instruments make it impossible to distinguish between local shortfalls in producing skilled workers, internal brain drain to other sectors of the same economy, and emigration.
, 百拇医药
The need for consistent and comparable international migration data is obvious. Institutions like the International Labour Organization, the World Trade Organization, and WHO must take a lead in harmonising the development of comparable instruments for collecting data. This is necessary for crafting equitable policies to govern ethical recruitment. Unfortunately, however, it may take years for the necessary consensus to emerge.
The absence of a consensus should not be used to justify governmental inaction. A well designed global cross sectional survey of health professionals could provide the basis for a preliminary analysis of the scope, magnitude, and direction of these flows. Such information would facilitate comparative analyses of the factors that influence emigration of health workers; the economic, social, and political determinants of changes in policies in both origin and receiving countries; and the influence of immigration policies on skilled migration in both origin and receiving countries.
, 百拇医药
Evidence from such a survey could form the basis for international action. It is, however, unlikely that any single policy will be sufficient. Firstly, the factors influencing the decision to emigrate are complex. Secondly, the countries involved vary greatly. Some produce more health professionals than they can absorb (Egypt, Cuba, Spain, Israel, and Italy) while others (US and UK) produce fewer than they need.5 15 31 Between these extremes are countries that both send and receive health workers in a pattern that reflects their level of social, political, and economic development.
, 百拇医药
Successful international action will require a global framework for the management of skills migration. It is critical to engage the active participation and cooperation of all the major players: major developed countries, major developing countries, multilateral agencies, and representatives of the health professions. The goal of such a framework will be to:
Suggested national strategies for migration of health workers
Developing countries
, http://www.100md.com
Determine the socioeconomic, political, and professional factors influencing migration
Restructure training programmes to reflect critical national needs without compromising on quality
Involve traditional community leaders in awarding foreign training grants (people may feel more obligated to return if grants are channelled through their community leaders as opposed to faceless, nameless bureaucratic systems)
, 百拇医药
Invest in improving the working conditions of health professionals by rechannelling resources spent in recruiting foreign health professionals
Require publicly funded trainees to commit to a specified period of national service
Vigorously pursue policies that emphasise development of science and technology research
Enter into bilateral agreements with receiving countries to control skill flow and derive some compensation
, 百拇医药
Developed countries
Make a genuine commitment to train more health professionals
Develop and implement a code of conduct for ethical international recruitment
Limit recruitment from countries with clear staffing shortages
Issue non-extendable visas geared towards acquiring skills that benefit the source country
Implement policies that facilitate the re-entry of skilled professionals back into the host country after a period in their country of origin
, 百拇医药
Pay some compensation to source country through bilateral arrangements (financial help, expansion of infrastructure or technology, targeted research funding, or exchange of health professionals)
Summary points
Many developed countries have insufficient health workers to meet their needs
Recruiting from developing countries is damaging
Better data on movement of health workers are needed to inform an international ethical framework
, http://www.100md.com
Both developed and developing countries can take immediate action to limit the damage from migration
Link international migration to the health policy goals of individual countries.
Develop a set of rules or guidelines to govern the recruitment of health workers.
Develop guidelines for bilateral and multilateral compensation agreements.15
Identify countries from which recruitment may be less harmful.
, 百拇医药
Monitor and document the production of the extra workforce to meet the needs of receiving countries without injuring the health systems of origin countries.
Safeguard the rights of recruits in the host country.
Setting up such a framework will be complicated. It is, nevertheless, necessary if we are to uphold the principles of fairness. The codes of practice developed by the UK and the Commonwealth will provide a good starting template.26 27 Although the international community needs to guarantee an equitable environment for the administration of ethical recruitment, steps can be taken independently by both origin and receiving countries (box). Prompt action is essential for everyone's health.
, http://www.100md.com
Contributors and sources: The author is a physician and demographer with considerable domestic and international professional experience. He spent over a decade exploring issues of equity and global comparative health metrics. This article arose from earlier work on the implications of the brain drain phenomenon on the health research capacity of developing countries. The evidence provided is based on published material in print and in electronic format.
Competing interests: None declared.
, 百拇医药
References
Mejia A, Pizurki H, Royston E. Physician and nurse migration: analysis and policy implications. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1979.
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Trends in international migration. Paris: OECD, 1997.
Buchan J, Parkin T, Sochalski J. International nurse mobility: trends and policy implications. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2003. www.icn.ch/Int_Nurse_mobility%20final.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
, http://www.100md.com
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. International mobility of the highly skilled. Paris, OECD, 2002.
Carrington W, Detragiache E. How big is the brain drain Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund, 1998. (Working paper WP/98/102.)
International Organization for Migration. Return of qualified African nationals programme: fact sheet. Geneva; IOM, 1999.
Ghana Ministry of Health. In-depth review of human resource development: five-year program of work. Accra: MoH, 1999.
, http://www.100md.com
Buchan J, Dovlo D. International recruitment of health workers to the UK. London: Department for International Development, 2004.
Lowell BL, Findlay AM. Migration of highly skilled persons from developing countries: impact and policy responses. Geneva: International Labour Office, 2001. www.ilo.org/public/english/protection/migrant/download/skmig-sr.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
International Labour Organization. Social dialogue in the health services: institutions, capacity and effectiveness. Geneva: ILO, 2002. www.ilo.org/public/english/dialogue/sector/techmeet/jmhs02/jmhs-r.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
, http://www.100md.com
The competition for global talent. Financial Express 2005 Feb 8.
Regets MC. Research and policy issues in high-skilled international migration: a perspective with data from the United States. Arlington VG: National Science Foundation, 2001. (Discussion paper 366.)
Adams O, Kinnon C. A public health perspective. International trade in health services: a developmental perspective. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1998.
, 百拇医药
Carrington WJ, Detragiache E. How extensive is the brain drain Finance Dev 1999;36: 46-9.
Couper ID, Worley PS. The ethics of international recruitment. Rural and Remote Health 2002;2:196. http://rrh.deakin.edu.au/articles/subviewnew.aspArticleID=196 (accessed 14 June 2005).
Pang T, Lansang MA, Haines A. Brain drain and health professionals. BMJ 2002;324: 499-500.
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Is the health of older persons in OECD countries improving fast enough to compensate for population ageing OECD Economic Studies 2000;30: 149-90.
, 百拇医药
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Maintaining prosperity in an ageing society. Paris: OECD, 1998.
Blondal S, Scarpetta S. Early retirement in OECD countries: the role of social security systems. OECD Economic Studies 1999:No 29.
US Department of Health and Human Services. Projected supply, demand, and shortages of registered nurses: 2000-2002. Health Resources and Services Administration, Bureau of Health Professions. 2002.
, 百拇医药
Goldacre M. Planning the United Kingdom's medical workforce. BMJ 1998;316: 1847.
Sullivan P. Medical school enrollment growing too slowly CMAJ 2001;164: 1334.
Department of Health and Aging. Health workforce: rural medical bonded scholarships. Canberra, Australia. 2001.
United Nations Population Division. International migration report 2002. Washington, DC: UN, 2003.
, 百拇医药
Germany: Schily proposal. Migration News 2001;8(9). http://migration.ucdavis.edu/mn/more.phpid=2450_0_4_0 (accessed 14 June 2005).
International Council of Nurses. Position statement: ethical nurse recruitment, 2001. Geneva: ICN, 2001. www.icn.ch/psrecruit01.htm (accessed 14 June 2005).
Department of Health. Code of practice for NHS employers involved in the international recruitment of healthcare professionals. London: DoH, 2001.
, 百拇医药
Commonwealth Secretariat. Companion document to the Commonwealth code of practice for international recruitment of health workers. London: Commonwealth Secretariat, 2003.
Willetts A, Martineau T. Ethical international recruitment of health professionals: Will codes of practice protect developing country health systems Liverpool: Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, 2004. www.liv.ac.uk/lstm/research/documents/codesofpracticereport.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
Diallo K. Data on migration of health workers: sources, uses and challenges. Bull World Health Organ 2004;82: 601-7.
Kandela P. Oversupply of doctors fuel Egypt's health care crises. Lancet 1998;352: 123., 百拇医药(Omar B Ahmad)
Migration of health workers from poorer to richer nations is unlikely to stop, but we can and must put policies in place to minimise the damage it causes
Introduction
In the past, the migration of skilled health professionals from poorer to richer countries was essentially a passive process. Movement was driven mainly by the political, economic, social, and professional circumstances of the individual migrant. In recent years, however, demand for health workers in many countries in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development has been greatly increased by changes in population dynamics. In response, some of these countries are relying increasingly on imported labour, with potentially damaging consequences for the healthcare systems in many developing countries, especially Africa. Indiscriminate poaching of health professionals is also likely to damage receiving countries in the long term. In this article I explore the policy options likely to minimise the consequences of migration of health workers.
, 百拇医药
Why do health workers emigrate
Studies focusing on why skilled health professionals emigrate have identified two broad categories: the "push" and the "pull" factors.1 2 Among the push factors are low wages, poor motivation, persistent shortages of basic medical supplies, dangerous working conditions, outdated equipment, lack of supervision, and limited career opportunities.2 3 Involuntary factors such as human rights violations, ethnic and religious tensions, political persecution, wars, and economic collapse also play a part.4 Economic reasons, access to professional development opportunities, and job security are among the most important pull factors.
, 百拇医药
Empirical evidence on the size of the problem is only now emerging.5 6 For instance, in Ghana over 60% of all doctors trained locally in the 1980s had emigrated by 1999.7 In 2001 alone, it lost over 2972 nurses compared with 387 nurses in 1999.8 The vacancy rate for nurses in 2002 was 57% compared with 25% in 1998. Similar losses are reported in other parts of the developing world.6 7 9
Too few doctors who come to the West ever return home
, 百拇医药
Credit: IAN HOOTON/SPL
Winners and losers
The mass emigration of skilled health professionals is not a neutral event. At present the costs and benefits are unevenly distributed.4 10 The host countries benefit from short term relief of labour shortages, increase in available human capital, stimulation of capacity for innovation, savings in educational costs, and increased global competitiveness.11 The potential benefits to the origin countries include financial gains through remittances, skills transfer, and possible investment if workers return.12 However, all these are trivial compared with the losses, which include loss of public educational investment, loss of intellectual capital, reduced range of available services, chronic understaffing of health facilities, and poor healthcare services.3 13 In extreme cases, a widening of the population health gap may result in reduced productivity, loss of national economic investment, and potential damage to economic development.1 2 13
, http://www.100md.com
Affected developing countries face difficult choices. They can neither control the outflow of skill nor ignore its consequences on the larger community.14 The right of the individual health worker to emigrate has to be balanced against the consequences of such migration on the welfare of the larger society. This problem has rekindled an old debate between those who view skilled migration as the rational expression of the right of individuals to maximise their utility and those who view it as concealed exploitation of poorer countries by the richer countries.15 16
, 百拇医药
What went wrong
Changing population dynamics within industrialised countries have created an ageing population with increased demand on health services.17 The problems arising from factors such as low fertility, increased longevity, a trend towards early retirement, and an ageing workforce are likely to deepen over the next half century.18 19 This difficulty is compounded by a persistent shortage of health professionals, especially nurses. The US, for example, expects a nursing shortfall of around 500 000 by 2015.20 In addition, globalisation and the rapid commercialisation of health services has increased competition for skilled labour.13
, 百拇医药
In response, some governments (developed and developing) have entered into bilateral agreements for the supply of healthcare professionals from specific countries for specified durations.10 Others, like Canada, Australia, and the UK have opted for a two pronged approach. A short term plan of "ethical" international recruitment and a long range plan to train more new doctors and nurses.21 22 23 More generally, however, many countries have instituted emigration policies that favour direct recruitment of foreign health professionals—for example, the US H-1C visa programme targeting nurses, Australia's migration occupations in demand list, the UK's shortage occupations list, and Germany's green card system.3 24 In effect, many countries are using selective immigration as an instrument of industrial policy.10 In the words of the German interior minister Otto Schily: "There's competition among the industrialised countries for the best minds. That's why we have to direct our immigration law more strongly towards our own economic interests."25
, http://www.100md.com
Challenge of ethical recruitment
It is tempting, therefore, for destination countries to ignore the consequences of indiscriminate poaching on the health of the origin countries. This strategy, however, is unlikely to serve the long term interests of either the origin or the receiving countries. The consequences of further deterioration of the already frail health systems in affected countries may go beyond health to other sectors of the economy.15 16 25 The potential for economic decline, political instability, and mass emigration is real. More drastic measures than those used recently by Italy and Australia may be necessary to halt migration into developed countries.
, http://www.100md.com
Fortunately, concern about the harmful effects of indiscriminate poaching is growing.26 The adoption of a code of ethical recruitment by the UK Department of Health and Commonwealth countries are notable (albeit feeble) attempts at minimising the damage.27 28 So far, however, the effect of the existing codes on recruitment has not been systematically examined.29
Strategies and solutions
Clearly, the shortage of health professionals has no simple solution. The problem is global and therefore requires a global solution. The goal is to meet the legitimate labour needs of the developed countries without damaging the health systems of the developing countries. However, effective international cooperation on the management of skills migration cannot be achieved without comprehensive and accurate data on stocks and flows of health workers. This is difficult to obtain because countries are not specifically required to track healthcare staff. A recent review by WHO noted that existing data on the migration of health workers are neither complete nor fully comparable, are often underused, and are not as timely as required.30 Furthermore, the lack of standardised definitions and data instruments make it impossible to distinguish between local shortfalls in producing skilled workers, internal brain drain to other sectors of the same economy, and emigration.
, 百拇医药
The need for consistent and comparable international migration data is obvious. Institutions like the International Labour Organization, the World Trade Organization, and WHO must take a lead in harmonising the development of comparable instruments for collecting data. This is necessary for crafting equitable policies to govern ethical recruitment. Unfortunately, however, it may take years for the necessary consensus to emerge.
The absence of a consensus should not be used to justify governmental inaction. A well designed global cross sectional survey of health professionals could provide the basis for a preliminary analysis of the scope, magnitude, and direction of these flows. Such information would facilitate comparative analyses of the factors that influence emigration of health workers; the economic, social, and political determinants of changes in policies in both origin and receiving countries; and the influence of immigration policies on skilled migration in both origin and receiving countries.
, 百拇医药
Evidence from such a survey could form the basis for international action. It is, however, unlikely that any single policy will be sufficient. Firstly, the factors influencing the decision to emigrate are complex. Secondly, the countries involved vary greatly. Some produce more health professionals than they can absorb (Egypt, Cuba, Spain, Israel, and Italy) while others (US and UK) produce fewer than they need.5 15 31 Between these extremes are countries that both send and receive health workers in a pattern that reflects their level of social, political, and economic development.
, 百拇医药
Successful international action will require a global framework for the management of skills migration. It is critical to engage the active participation and cooperation of all the major players: major developed countries, major developing countries, multilateral agencies, and representatives of the health professions. The goal of such a framework will be to:
Suggested national strategies for migration of health workers
Developing countries
, http://www.100md.com
Determine the socioeconomic, political, and professional factors influencing migration
Restructure training programmes to reflect critical national needs without compromising on quality
Involve traditional community leaders in awarding foreign training grants (people may feel more obligated to return if grants are channelled through their community leaders as opposed to faceless, nameless bureaucratic systems)
, 百拇医药
Invest in improving the working conditions of health professionals by rechannelling resources spent in recruiting foreign health professionals
Require publicly funded trainees to commit to a specified period of national service
Vigorously pursue policies that emphasise development of science and technology research
Enter into bilateral agreements with receiving countries to control skill flow and derive some compensation
, 百拇医药
Developed countries
Make a genuine commitment to train more health professionals
Develop and implement a code of conduct for ethical international recruitment
Limit recruitment from countries with clear staffing shortages
Issue non-extendable visas geared towards acquiring skills that benefit the source country
Implement policies that facilitate the re-entry of skilled professionals back into the host country after a period in their country of origin
, 百拇医药
Pay some compensation to source country through bilateral arrangements (financial help, expansion of infrastructure or technology, targeted research funding, or exchange of health professionals)
Summary points
Many developed countries have insufficient health workers to meet their needs
Recruiting from developing countries is damaging
Better data on movement of health workers are needed to inform an international ethical framework
, http://www.100md.com
Both developed and developing countries can take immediate action to limit the damage from migration
Link international migration to the health policy goals of individual countries.
Develop a set of rules or guidelines to govern the recruitment of health workers.
Develop guidelines for bilateral and multilateral compensation agreements.15
Identify countries from which recruitment may be less harmful.
, 百拇医药
Monitor and document the production of the extra workforce to meet the needs of receiving countries without injuring the health systems of origin countries.
Safeguard the rights of recruits in the host country.
Setting up such a framework will be complicated. It is, nevertheless, necessary if we are to uphold the principles of fairness. The codes of practice developed by the UK and the Commonwealth will provide a good starting template.26 27 Although the international community needs to guarantee an equitable environment for the administration of ethical recruitment, steps can be taken independently by both origin and receiving countries (box). Prompt action is essential for everyone's health.
, http://www.100md.com
Contributors and sources: The author is a physician and demographer with considerable domestic and international professional experience. He spent over a decade exploring issues of equity and global comparative health metrics. This article arose from earlier work on the implications of the brain drain phenomenon on the health research capacity of developing countries. The evidence provided is based on published material in print and in electronic format.
Competing interests: None declared.
, 百拇医药
References
Mejia A, Pizurki H, Royston E. Physician and nurse migration: analysis and policy implications. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1979.
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Trends in international migration. Paris: OECD, 1997.
Buchan J, Parkin T, Sochalski J. International nurse mobility: trends and policy implications. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2003. www.icn.ch/Int_Nurse_mobility%20final.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
, http://www.100md.com
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. International mobility of the highly skilled. Paris, OECD, 2002.
Carrington W, Detragiache E. How big is the brain drain Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund, 1998. (Working paper WP/98/102.)
International Organization for Migration. Return of qualified African nationals programme: fact sheet. Geneva; IOM, 1999.
Ghana Ministry of Health. In-depth review of human resource development: five-year program of work. Accra: MoH, 1999.
, http://www.100md.com
Buchan J, Dovlo D. International recruitment of health workers to the UK. London: Department for International Development, 2004.
Lowell BL, Findlay AM. Migration of highly skilled persons from developing countries: impact and policy responses. Geneva: International Labour Office, 2001. www.ilo.org/public/english/protection/migrant/download/skmig-sr.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
International Labour Organization. Social dialogue in the health services: institutions, capacity and effectiveness. Geneva: ILO, 2002. www.ilo.org/public/english/dialogue/sector/techmeet/jmhs02/jmhs-r.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
, http://www.100md.com
The competition for global talent. Financial Express 2005 Feb 8.
Regets MC. Research and policy issues in high-skilled international migration: a perspective with data from the United States. Arlington VG: National Science Foundation, 2001. (Discussion paper 366.)
Adams O, Kinnon C. A public health perspective. International trade in health services: a developmental perspective. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1998.
, 百拇医药
Carrington WJ, Detragiache E. How extensive is the brain drain Finance Dev 1999;36: 46-9.
Couper ID, Worley PS. The ethics of international recruitment. Rural and Remote Health 2002;2:196. http://rrh.deakin.edu.au/articles/subviewnew.aspArticleID=196 (accessed 14 June 2005).
Pang T, Lansang MA, Haines A. Brain drain and health professionals. BMJ 2002;324: 499-500.
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Is the health of older persons in OECD countries improving fast enough to compensate for population ageing OECD Economic Studies 2000;30: 149-90.
, 百拇医药
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Maintaining prosperity in an ageing society. Paris: OECD, 1998.
Blondal S, Scarpetta S. Early retirement in OECD countries: the role of social security systems. OECD Economic Studies 1999:No 29.
US Department of Health and Human Services. Projected supply, demand, and shortages of registered nurses: 2000-2002. Health Resources and Services Administration, Bureau of Health Professions. 2002.
, 百拇医药
Goldacre M. Planning the United Kingdom's medical workforce. BMJ 1998;316: 1847.
Sullivan P. Medical school enrollment growing too slowly CMAJ 2001;164: 1334.
Department of Health and Aging. Health workforce: rural medical bonded scholarships. Canberra, Australia. 2001.
United Nations Population Division. International migration report 2002. Washington, DC: UN, 2003.
, 百拇医药
Germany: Schily proposal. Migration News 2001;8(9). http://migration.ucdavis.edu/mn/more.phpid=2450_0_4_0 (accessed 14 June 2005).
International Council of Nurses. Position statement: ethical nurse recruitment, 2001. Geneva: ICN, 2001. www.icn.ch/psrecruit01.htm (accessed 14 June 2005).
Department of Health. Code of practice for NHS employers involved in the international recruitment of healthcare professionals. London: DoH, 2001.
, 百拇医药
Commonwealth Secretariat. Companion document to the Commonwealth code of practice for international recruitment of health workers. London: Commonwealth Secretariat, 2003.
Willetts A, Martineau T. Ethical international recruitment of health professionals: Will codes of practice protect developing country health systems Liverpool: Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, 2004. www.liv.ac.uk/lstm/research/documents/codesofpracticereport.pdf (accessed 14 June 2005).
Diallo K. Data on migration of health workers: sources, uses and challenges. Bull World Health Organ 2004;82: 601-7.
Kandela P. Oversupply of doctors fuel Egypt's health care crises. Lancet 1998;352: 123., 百拇医药(Omar B Ahmad)