叙利亚难民和侨民保健专业人员:来自东地中海和欧洲区域的案例研究

IF 2.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Aula Abbara , Munzer Alkhalil , Kinan Wihba , Omer Abdrabbuh , Diana Rayes , Andrew Ghobrial , Manar Marzouk , Fadi Halabi , Mahmoud Hariri , Abdulkarim Ekzayez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2011年3月起义爆发并随后陷入冲突以来,数千名叙利亚医疗保健专业人员被迫离开叙利亚。最初,许多人留在东地中海地区;然而,随着冲突变得越来越旷日持久,医疗保健专业人员(hcp)的就业政策变得越来越严格,一些人转移到其他地方,特别是德国和英国,这两个国家都旨在利用难民和散居海外的hcp来弥补其卫生系统中的人力资源缺口。我们的目的是探讨在东地中海和欧洲地区对叙利亚难民和散居的hcp的不同政策做法。方法:我们完成了一项叙述性文献综述,并于2022年11月举办了一个封闭的虚拟研讨会,45名参与者参加了研讨会,其中大多数人都有不同难民收容背景的生活经验。这使我们能够从文献综述和作者的观察中探索主要主题,并将我们的发现作为案例研究。结果:我们通过来自叙利亚附近国家(土耳其、黎巴嫩、约旦、埃及)和欧洲国家(德国、英国)的案例研究,探讨了支持或限制卫生人力进入的不同政策。对于东道国而言,那些实施支持再培训、认证和进入劳动力队伍的政策的国家有可能为其卫生系统带来持续和具有成本效益的效益;这对卫生服务提供者和卫生系统的影响需要进一步探讨。如果没有这样的政策,叙利亚的医务人员被迫在黎巴嫩或埃及等非正规卫生部门工作,从而导致潜在的剥削和安全风险。讨论:现在是支持叙利亚和其他被迫离开家园的难民医务人员利用其技能探索可能有效的政策和干预措施的影响的重要机会。这些政策旨在投资于难民医务人员的技能,进一步发展他们的能力,并有可能在他们和他们的家园之间建立联系,以一种对流亡和家园的卫生系统都有利的方式。尽管如此,这一主题仍有很大的研究空白,迫切需要研究和数据,特别是考虑到叙利亚政权于2024年12月垮台及其潜在影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Syrian refugee and diaspora healthcare professionals: Case studies from the eastern mediterranean and European regions
Thousands of Syrian healthcare professionals have been forced to leave Syria since the onset of the uprisings in March 2011 and subsequent descent into conflict. Initially, many stayed in the eastern mediterranean region; however, as the conflict became increasingly protracted and employment policies for Healthcare Professionals (HCPs) became increasingly restrictive, some moved elsewhere, particularly to Germany and the United Kingdom, both of which have aimed to capitalise on both refugee and diaspora HCPs to support human resources gaps in their health systems. Our aim is to explore the different policy practices towards Syrian refugee and diaspora HCPs in the eastern mediterranean and European regions. Methods: We completed a narrative literature review and held a closed, virtual workshop in November 2022 in which 45 participants, most of whom had lived experience in the different refugee hosting contexts, participated. This allowed us to probe the primary themes arising from the literature review and the authors’ observations and present our findings as case studies. Results: We explore through case studies from countries near Syria (Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt) and in Europe (Germany, UK) different policies which support or restrict entry into the health workforce. For host countries, those which implement policies that support retraining, accreditation and entry into the workforce have the potential for sustained and cost-effective benefit to their health systems; the impact of this on the HCPs and health system needs further exploration. Without such policies, Syrian HCPs are forced to work in the informal health sector such as in Lebanon or Egypt, leading to potential exploitation and security risks. Discussion: Now is an important opportunity to support Syrian and other refugee HCPs who have been forced to leave their homes to capitalise on their skills to explore the impacts of potentially effective policies and interventions. Such policies that aim to invest in refugee HCPs’ skills, further develop their aptitudes, and potentially establish a connection between them and their homeland in a mutually beneficial manner for both health systems in exile and in their homeland. Nonetheless, this topic still has large research gaps and remains in need of urgent research and data, particularly in view of the fall of the Syrian regime in December 2024 and its potential impacts.
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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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