[保健专业人员的移徙模式]。

Mireille Kingma
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的三十年中,国际移民的数量翻了一番,2003年达到了前所未有的1.75亿人。国家卫生系统往往是最大的国家雇主,在全世界雇用了大约3500万名工人。卫生专业人员是不断扩大的全球劳动力市场的一部分。今天,在澳大利亚、加拿大、联合王国和美国接受过外国教育的保健专业人员占医疗和护理人员总数的四分之一以上。然而,目的地国家并不局限于工业化国家。例如,纳米比亚公共服务部门50%的医生是外籍人士,南非继续从其他国家招募近80%的农村医生。国际移徙往往模仿国内移徙的模式。从农村到城市地区、从低收入到高收入城市社区以及从低收入到高收入部门的人口外流对人口的普遍覆盖构成了挑战。国际移徙往往被认为是发展中国家卫生专业人员严重短缺的原因。然而,经合组织最近的一项研究得出结论,南非的许多注册护士(远远超过移民的人数)要么不活跃,要么失业。这些可怕的情况构成了一个在很大程度上被忽视的现代悖论。共同的语言、提高生活质量的承诺和全球化都支持卫生专业人员国际移徙的继续存在。这种流动性的道德层面是一个需要解决的敏感问题。然而,为了减少迁移的需要,而不是人为地抑制流动,需要进行重大的范式转变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Migration patterns of health professionals].

The past three decades have seen the number of international migrants double, to reach the unprecedented total of 175 million people in 2003. National health systems are often the biggest national employer, responsible for an estimated 35 million workers worldwide. Health professionals are part of the expanding global labour market. Today, foreign-educated health professionals represent more than a quarter of the medical and nursing workforces of Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. Destination countries, however, are not limited to industrialised nations. For example, 50 per cent of physicians in the Namibia public services are expatriates and South Africa continues to recruit close to 80% of its rural physicians from other countries. International migration often imitates patterns of internal migration. The exodus from rural to urban areas, from lower to higher income urban neighbourhoods and from lower-income to higher-income sectors contributes challenges to the universal coverage of the population. International migration is often blamed for the dramatic health professional shortages witnessed in the developing countries. A recent OECD study, however, concludes that many registered nurses in South Africa (far exceeding the number that emigrate) are either inactive or unemployed. These dire situations constitute a modern paradox which is for the most part ignored. Shared language, promises of a better quality of life and globalization all support the continued existence of health professionals' international migration. The ethical dimension o this mobility is a sensitive issue that needs to be addressed. A major paradigm shift, however, is required in order to lessen the need to migrate rather than artificially curb the flows.

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