Literature DB >> 17489924

International nurse recruitment in India.

Binod Khadria1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This paper describes the practice of international recruitment of Indian nurses in the model of a "business process outsourcing" of comprehensive training-cum-recruitment-cum-placement for popular destinations like the United Kingdom and United States through an agency system that has acquired growing intensity in India.
FINDINGS: Despite the extremely low nurse to population ratio in India, hospital managers in India are not concerned about the growing exodus of nurses to other countries. In fact, they are actively joining forces with profitable commercial ventures that operate as both training and recruiting agencies. Most of this activity is concentrated in Delhi, Bangalore, and Kochi.
CONCLUSIONS: Gaps in data on nursing education, employment, and migration, as well as nonstandardization of definitions of "registered nurse," impair the analysis of international migration of nurses from India, making it difficult to assess the impact of migration on vacancy rates. One thing is clear, however, the chain of commercial interests that facilitate nurse migration is increasingly well organized and profitable, making the future growth of this business a certainty.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17489924      PMCID: PMC1955375          DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2007.00718.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Res        ISSN: 0017-9124            Impact factor:   3.402


  1 in total

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8.  Nursing brain drain from India.

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9.  A comparative study of attitudes toward psychiatry among nursing students across successive training years.

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