| Literature DB >> 24228827 |
Jennifer S Edge, Steven J Hoffman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The active recruitment of health workers from developing countries to developed countries has become a major threat to global health. In an effort to manage this migration, the 63rd World Health Assembly adopted the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel in May 2010. While the Code has been lauded as the first globally-applicable regulatory framework for health worker recruitment, its impact has yet to be evaluated. We offer the first empirical evaluation of the Code's impact on national and sub-national actors in Australia, Canada, United Kingdom and United States of America, which are the English-speaking developed countries with the greatest number of migrant health workers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24228827 PMCID: PMC3901788 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-9-60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Summary of “Push” and “Pull” factors on the migration of health workers
| Push factors encouraging emigration from source countries | • Poor remuneration [ |
| • Concerns for personal safety [ | |
| • Few career prospects and opportunities for promotion [ | |
| • Poor working conditions and heavy workload [ | |
| • Poor living conditions [ | |
| Pull factors encouraging immigration to destination countries | • Better remuneration [ |
| • Safer environment [ | |
| • Professional development and career advancement opportunities [ | |
| • Improved working conditions and facilities [ | |
| • Higher standards of living [ |
Key elements of the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel
| Establish ethical framework | Establishes ethical framework for international health worker recruitment based on voluntary principles |
| Balance rights | Balances the rights, obligations and expectations of source and destination countries and health workers |
| Strengthen health systems | High-income countries should support health systems strengthening through voluntary financial means, and provide technical assistance, training, technological and skill transfer and promote circular migration to create a net positive effect on low-income source countries |
| Support domestic development | Prioritizes the development of domestic health personnel and managing the mal-distribution of health workers between rural and urban areas |
| Facilitate information exchange | Calls for the creation of bilateral agreements, a national database of laws and regulations, designation of a national authority responsible for exchanging information with the WHO Secretariat and research partnerships at national, sub-national, and international levels |
| Develop regulatory framework | Supports capacity building for health information systems, continuous monitoring and evaluation of the health labour market and the development of a regulatory framework for health worker retention |
| Encourage compliance | Urges that the Code’s contents be publicized among all stakeholders involved in health worker migration and that governments only interact with recruitment agencies that operate in compliance with the Code |
| Enhance training | Recommends that training in source countries match the disease profile of such countries, encourages the twinning of health facilities, and demands that access to specialized training and technology be made a priority |
Comparing the various current international codes on health workforce recruitment
| Establish and promote voluntary principles; Serve as a reference to improve legal framework; Provide guidance in the formulation and implementation of bilateral agreements; Facilitate and promote international discussion and cooperation | Global | Bilateral agreements among states and other supplementary international legal instruments | Destination countries should respect the overriding legal obligation of health personnel to fulfill their working obligations in home countries and seek not to recruit them | Establishment of national health authority to provide updates on Code implementation and exchange information on health workforce migration to the WHO Secretariat | |
| Destination countries should provide financial and technical support to developing source countries | Global scope: considers rights and obligations of both source and destination countries and migrant health personnel | ||||
| Judiciously manage the employment of health professionals from abroad | International—applies to all member states of the WFPHA | Mandating WFPHA governments work only with employers that comply with the Code | Low-income countries receive something in compensation for sending health professionals (e.g. health worker exchange programs, government remuneration, continuing education for workers) | Builds upon UK DoH Code of Practice by restricting recruitment from developing countries that only have bilateral agreements with WFPHA | |
| Proposes definition for “active recruitment” | |||||
| Offer principles and best practice benchmarks to be met in order to supply and manage international health professionals in an ethical manner. | Regional – applies to employers of the UK’s National Health System | Mandating NHS to work only with recruitment agencies that comply with the Code | Aims to prevent the active recruitment of healthcare workers from developing countries unless a government-to-government agreement to support recruitment exists | First national code of practice for international recruitment | |
| Provide targeted recruitment guidelines, education and language proficiency requirements, and employment laws related to international recruitment in order to establish ethical practice (DOH, 2004). | Manages migration with respect to active recruitment, but does not advocate for the retention or training of health workers in either the source or destination country | Best practice benchmarks to gauge adherence to core principles | |||
| | Online registry of commercial recruitment agencies complying with the code of practice | ||||
| Non-compliance by recruitment agencies can lead to grievances, investigations and loss of business with NHS. | |||||
| To provide Commonwealth governments with a framework for the ethical international recruitment of health workers to take place, taking into account the impact of such recruitment on source countries | International – applies to all governments of the Commonwealth nations | Promote dialogue among developed and developing countries to resolve this challenge | Acknowledges that recruitment diminishes the source country’s human resources and negatively impacts health systems. | Proposes its scope go beyond Commonwealth nations and be taken as a proposed global code of practice on this issue | |
| Follow-up with bilateral and other contractual agreements, e.g. bonding health workers | Bilateral agreements should regulate the recruitment process and be accompanied by mechanisms to detect non-compliance. (Labonte, Packer et al, 2007). |
Number of survey respondents by country and sector
| 2 | 6 | 2 | 10 | |
| 1 | 9 | 0 | 10 | |
| 0 | 5 | 1 | 6 | |
| 1 | 10 | 5 | 16 | |
| 4 | 30 | 8 | 42 |